Special Envoy: A Spy Novel
By (Author) Jean Echenoz
Translated by Sam Taylor
The New Press
The New Press
7th November 2017
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
843/.914
Hardback
160
Width 133mm, Height 190mm
Special Envoy is an exceedingly French spy thriller.
New York Times Book Review
, part Pink Panther and part Le Carrfrom one of the world's preeminent authors
Jean Echenozs sly and playful novels have won critical and popular acclaim in France, where he has won the Prix Goncourt, as well as in the United States, where he has been profiled by the New Yorker and called themost distinctive voice of his generation by the Washington Post. With his wonderfully droll and intriguing new work, Special Envoy, Echenoz turns his hand to the espionage novel. When published in France, it stormed the bestseller lists.
Special Envoy begins with an old general in Frances intelligence agency asking his trusted lieutenant Paul Objat for ideas about a person he wants for a particular job: someone to aid the destabilization of Kim Jong-uns regime in North Korea. Objat has someone in mind: Constance, an attractive, restless, bored woman in a failing marriage to a washed-up pop musician. Soon after, she is abducted by Objats cronies and spirited away into the lower depths of Frances intelligence bureaucracy where she is trained for her mission.
What follows is a bizarre tale of kidnappings, murders and mutilations, bad pop songs and great sex, populated by a cast of oddballs and losers. Set in Paris, rural central France, and Pyongyang, Special Envoy is joyously strange and unpredictable, full of twists and ironic digressionsand, in the words of LExpress, a pure gem, a delight.
Praise for Special Envoy: "A shaggy tale that blends spy-novel pastiche with today's headlines. Fans of Echenoz will recognize his signature playfulness and affection for the offbeat caper." Kirkus Reviews Praise for Jean Echenoz: "Witty, passionate, Echenozs novels are often the opposite of realisticplayful fantasies in which characters bounce in and out of sight like acrobats on a trampoline, with plots that hopscotch wildly over time and space." Max Byrd, New York Times Book Review "The most distinctive voice of his generation and the master magician of the contemporary French novel." The Washington Post "Rarely has the difficult craft of storytelling been as well mastered." Times Literary Supplement "A gentle tending to perversity links Echenoz to that other master of perverse detail, Vladimir Nabokov." Los Angeles Times "There is an echo of Garca Mrquez in these simple yet enigmatic pages. Echenoz gives us a slim series of elegant, tightly written tales, achieving a simple kind of magic. Kirkus
Jean Echenoz won Frances prestigious Prix Goncourt for Im Gone (The New Press). He is the winner of numerous literary prizes, among them the Prix Mdicis and the European Literature Jeopardy Prize. He lives in Paris. Sam Taylor is an acclaimed translator and novelist who lives in Texas. His translations include A Meal in Winter by Hubert Mingarelli (The New Press), The Arab of the Future by Riad Sattouf, and the award-winning HHhH by Lauren Binet.