Search results for ""Author Julien Gracq""
Turtle Point Press The Shape Of A City
The most original book of Julien Gracq's later output is about Nantes. It begins with a quotation from Beaudelaire that is repeated and distorted. Nantes, still haunted by Andr© Breton, Jacques Vache and Rimbaud behind them is reconstructed from a remembered image in which the lyc©e Cl©menceau occupies the centre. Pathos filtered through humour guides the author as he writes of a child's experience of the hierarchy of urban spaces. This is a beautiful work, provocative and powerfully set amid verifiable and equally moving land- and cityscapes.
£13.49
Acantilado A lo largo del camino Along the Way El acantilado Cliff
"El camino al que se refieren las notas que forman este libro es por supuesto el que atraviesa y enlaza los paisajes de la tierra. Es también, algunas veces, el del sueño, y a menudo el de la memoria, la mía y también la memoria colectiva, a veces la más lejana: la historia, y por eso es también el de la lectura y el del arte."
£17.53
Literaturverlag Droschl Der Versucher
£20.70
Literaturverlag Droschl Witterungen 2
£20.70
Matthes & Seitz Verlag Lebensknoten
£18.00
Klett-Cotta Verlag Das Ufer der Syrten
£19.00
World Poetry Books Abounding Freedom
£17.09
Wakefield Press Great Liberty
A previously untranslated gem of Surrealist prose poetry from the acclaimed French novelist In 1941, Julien Gracq, newly released from a German prisoner-of-war camp, wrote a series of prose poems that would come to represent the only properly Surrealist writings in his oeuvre. Surrealism provided Gracq with a means of counteracting his disturbing wartime experiences; his newfound freedom inspired a new freedom of personal expression, and he gave the collection an appropriate title, Great Liberty: “In the occult dictionary of Surrealism, the true name of poetry is liberation.” Gracq the poet rather than the novelist is at work here: Surrealist fireworks lace through bewitching modernist romance, fantasy, black humor and deadpan absurdism. A later, postwar section entitled “The Habitable Earth” presents Gracq as visionary traveler exploring Andes and Flanders and returning to the narrative impulse of his better-known fiction. Julien Gracq (1910–2007), born Louis Poirier, is known for such dreamlike novels as The Castle of Argol, A Dark Stranger, The Opposing Shore and Balcony in the Forest. He was close to the Surrealist movement, and André Breton in particular, to whom he devoted a critical study.
£12.99
The New York Review of Books, Inc A Balcony In The Forest
£15.99