Description
Book SynopsisThe Wife of Martin Guerre—based on a notorious trial in sixteenth-century France—is “one of the most significant short novels in English” (
Atlantic Monthly). Originally published in 1941, it still raises questions about identity, belonging, and about an individual’s capacity to act within an inflexible system.
Trade Review“One of the most significant short novels in English.” * Atlantic Monthly *
“Lewis wrote her vibrant novella in 1941 as the first in her Cases of Circumstantial Evidence trilogy, which Swallow Press has brought back into print. The mystery here is not Martin’s identity, but why Janet Lewis remains obscure.” * NewPages *
“Flaubertian in the elegance of its form and the gravity of its style.” * The New Yorker *
“Ohio University Press/Swallow Press is reissuing all three novels in Lewis’s Cases of Circumstantial Evidence series in new editions with fancy new covers. They’re gorgeous.” * The Book Haven *
“One of (the short novel’s) most perfect examples is Janet Lewis’s
The Wife of Martin Guerre.” * The Washington Post *
“When the literary history of the second millennium is written at the end of the third, in the category of dazzling American short fiction (Janet Lewis’s) Wife of Martin Guerre will be regarded as the 20th century's
Billy Budd and Janet Lewis will be ranked with Herman Melville.” * New York Times *
“A relentless and draining novel
sans merci, all the way to its ruthless end.” * The Book Haven *
“The Wife of Martin Guerre by Janet Lewis is one of the most resonant short novels I can remember. I greatly like two other books she wrote:
The Trial of Soren Qvist and
The Ghost of Monsieur Scarron. She never got the attention she deserved.”
“Lewis skillfully builds up Bertrande's growing conviction: it has a quality of a horror story, a stranger in her bed. Is she crazy? Is she sinning? She determines that she cannot continue in this way.” * Meredith Sue Willis’s Books for Readers *
“One of the last century’s great novels.” * A Commonplace Blog *
Janet Lewis brings the haunting qualities of fable to this novella, based on a legal case that attracted wide attention in 16th-century France and has continued to fascinate down through the years. * Wall Street Journal *