|    Login    |    Register

Blood Dark

(Paperback, Main)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Blood Dark

Contributors:

By (Author) Alice Kaplan
By (author) Louis Guilloux
By (author) Peter Bush

ISBN:

9781681371450

Publisher:

The New York Review of Books, Inc

Imprint:

The New York Review of Books, Inc

Publication Date:

15th October 2017

UK Publication Date:

23rd November 2017

Edition:

Main

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

843.912

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

592

Dimensions:

Width 128mm, Height 203mm, Spine 28mm

Weight:

530g

Description

Louis Guilloux's novel Blood Dark tells the story of a brilliant and provocative philosopher trapped in a provincial town and of his spiraling descent into self-destruction. Cripure, as his students call him, the name a mocking contraction of The Critique of Pure Reason, despises his colleagues and despairs of his charges and is at odds with his family. The year is 1917, and the First World War continues its relentless course, with French soldiers not only dying by the tens of thousands but also beginning to desert in protest. Cripure, having seen student after student go to his death, finds himself literally up in arms at the complacent patriotism of his fellow teachers as he challenges one of them to a duel. Unfolding over the course of a single day, Blood Dark describes both how Cripure manages to embroil himself in this from this ridiculous "Affair of honor," from which his few friends are helpless to rescue him, even as soldiers riot at the train station, and the mayor gobbles down pastries to avoid delivering death notices. Guilloux's novel, an important inspiration to the young Albert Camus, is an unflinching attack on the hypocritical pieties of a middle-class society and a tragic portrait of a man at war with the world and himself.

Reviews

"Laura Marriss disarmingly colloquial translationthe first in English since 1936, when the book was titled Bitter Victorymakes accessible a novel that chronicles, as though in real time, the transformations the catastrophe of World War I wrought on European civilization. Its a masterwork that in France is spoken of in the same breath as Clines Journey to the End of the Night and Sartres Nausea.there is a revelatory sense reading Guillouxs novel that one has found a key text linking the sparkling contempt of Flaubert to the tender resignation of Camus. Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal


"Guillouxs work deserves to be better known in the anglophone world; its good news that this major novel has resurfaced in Laura Marriss attentive and accomplished translation." Adrian Tahourdin, Times Literary Supplement

Considered a masterpiece by Gide, Malraux, Camus, and Pasternak, Guillouxs 1935 Blood Dark remains the least known in English of Frances twentieth-century blockbuster novels. Guilloux breaks with the tidiness of traditional French fiction to provide a hallucinatoryand tragicomicvision of a single day in the life (and death) of a small port town in Brittany during the mutinous and revolutionary year of 1917. At the heart of this apocalyptic satire lies the outsize figure of Cripure, a nihilistic highschool teacher of philosophy, a monstrous Ahab of the intellect suicidally in quest of his Nietzschean white whale. Guillouxs Le Sang noir here emerges afreshand urgentin this new translation by Laura Marris. Richard Sieburth

We come upon Blood Dark with something of a shock. For here is a novel projected in the grand style of the nineteenth century, a mountain of a novel, sprawling . . . out of which there emerges a great tragic figure. Harold Strauss, The New York Times

Author Bio

Louis Guilloux (1899-1980) worked as a left-wing organizer, a literary translator, and an interpreter for the American army in France. Laura Marris is a writer, translator, and Lecturer in Creative Writing at Boston University. Alice Kaplan is the author of The Collaborator: The Trial and Execution of Robert Brasillach, which was a finalist for the National Book Award. She is John M. Musser Professor of French at Yale University.

See all

Other titles from The New York Review of Books, Inc