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North

North


Author: Louis-Ferdinand Céline
Translator: Ralph Manheim
French Literature Series
March 2007
454 pages, 5.5 x 8
paperback, 1-56478-142-9
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Book Description

In this novel, Louis-Ferdinand Céline (Journey to the End of the Night, Death on the Installment Plan) offers us a vivid chronicle of a desperate man's frantic flight from France in the final months of World War II. Accompanied by his wife, their cat, and an actor friend, our autobiographical narrator Ferdinand leaves Paris for Baden-Baden (a World War II hideaway for wealthy Germans), is then sent to a bombed-out Berlin, and finally leaves for Denmark in search of the gold he had stashed there prior to the war. With the Third Reich in ruins and the Allied armies on Ferdinand's heels, North combines documentary realism with hallucinatory images, capturing the chaos of war and its toll on both victim and victimizer.

About the Author

Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1894-1961) changed French fiction permanently when he first exploded onto the literary scene in 1932 with Journey to the End of the Night and again in 1936 with Death on the Installment Plan. His vast and liberating influence on American writers can be seen in the works of Jack Kerouac, William Borroughs, Philip Roth, and Kurt Vonnegut, among others.

In 1993, Dalkey Archive published his previously untranslated London Bridge and has since made available his novels North, Rigadoon, and Castle to Castle.

About the Translator

Ralph Manheim's translation for Louis-Ferdinand Céline's Castle to Castle won him the National Book Award.

Praise

"North slams across our imminent fin-de-siècle pieties as a raw and dangerous abomination. . . . Simply as the tale of a picaresque ordeal . . . North is fascinating and fizzy, but what makes it so potent as a document is the 'remarkable sensibility' that Gide commended. The prose has a dense inconsecutiveness brought about in part by Céline's favorite device of the three dots . . . (which both invite you on and trip you up), but also by his flair for letting his imagination range further than his analytical mind wants to go."—Paul West, Washington Post Book World

"Well worth reading by any student of the last days of the German Reich."—Nigel Dennis, New York Review of Books

"Céline, for all his garrulous ranting, was one of the most important voices in modern French fiction, and his influence on American as well as French novelists cannot be underestimated. [North] has already received favorable criticism in this country, and this excellent translation will undoubtedly increase Céline's public here."—Choice

More Information

Also by Louis-Ferdinand Céline:
Castle to Castle
Conversations with Professor Y
London Bridge
Rigadoon
Also by Ralph Manheim:
Rigadoon