Étiquettes: Prix, Roman, Histoire, Lang:fr
Résumé:
Starred Review This remarkable first novel, a
prizewinner in the author's native France, ushers the reader
back to the devastating days of World War I. Dugain evokes
time, place, and character with light but indelible
brushstrokes, visualizing, as briefly as a dream but as
resonantly as a memory, the horrible atmosphere within the
French hospitals used for depositing the grievously wounded
coming in from the front. Before the outbreak of war,
Lieutenant Fournier was a railway engineer who had begun a new
job in Paris only months before his induction. No sooner was he
dispatched to the front than he was seriously wounded while on
a reconnaissance mission. Fournier is taken by ambulance back
to Paris, where he spends the remaining years of the war in a
ward reserved for officers. He must now cope with the fact that
a large portion of his face is gone and--despite attempted
surgical corrections--gone forever. Dugain's significant debut,
then, is not a war novel about trenches and strategy but one
about disfigurement and the psychological as well as physical
pain associated with "getting back into the swing of normal
life." This tough but elegant novel need not have been a single
page longer, for in its brevity, it speaks volumes about
survival in wartime.
Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights
reserved
"A novel of breathtaking simplicity and power . . . the complex tragedies and joys of suffering human beings." -- The Times on Saturday
"An unforgettable, short work with echoes of Birdsong and Pat Barker." -- The Bookseller