Sebastien Roch
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- 11,99 €
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- 11,99 €
Descripción editorial
'In the catalogue of novels about lives distorted by unhappy schooldays, Mirbeau's contribution must be one of the bitterest. He follows the young, carefree Sebastien from a small French town to the bleak Breton coast. There the Jesuit fathers, in whom his snobbish father has placed so much trust,heap misery upon misery. The ironmonger's son is mocked by France's adolescent aristocracy and turns for comfort to the perfidious priests. An angry novel, but poignant through Mirbeau's descriptions of landscape to which his hero sensitively responds. But the age allows no redemption for Roch except oblivion.' Isobel Montgomery in The Guardian 'The tale is a semi-autobiographical portrait of a boy's coming of age in provincial France against a Belle Epoque backdrop. From serene impressionism to violent pornographic excesses, the bones of Mirbeau's life makes for a moving novel.' Alex O'Connell in The Times 'It is a novel that combines anger and lyricism, the raw beauty of the landscape in sharp contrast to the ugliness of real life.' Tariq Ali in The Financial Times
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Mirbeau (1848-1917), author of The Diary of a Chambermaid, was infamous in fin de si cle society in Paris. This novel about the son of an ironmonger completes his trilogy of semiautobiographical novels and here is translated into English for the first time. S bastien Roch is brought to grim life in mid-19th-century France, as the boy endures a rugged education at a Jesuit school and dies on the battlefield a young man. Born in Pervench res, S bastien grows up a fresh-faced, blond and healthy child. While a student, he meets Bolorec, who remains a friend for life. S bastien studies the bloody exploits of Marat and Robespierre, wonders at the "two husbandless girls" who are sisters of a classmate and has a sexual awakening "beneath the veil of divine love." As the years pass, the innocent boy grows complicated and is expelled from school, still too ignorant of evil to suspect that his expulsion might have been prompted by a priest's sexual arousal. S bastien refuses to go to another Catholic school, and falls into an idyllic romance with his friend Marguerite before becoming a soldier. Oozing radiant health, innocence and promise, S bastien is a sympathetic hero repeatedly caught in the world's traps, which he spends his short life trying to escape. His story is clearly focused and features a cerebral tone and a finely wrought tempo. A languid beginning gives way to a byzantine middle, while an abrupt, violent and senseless end makes a powerful statement about 19th-century France, democratic ideals and a young man's sacrifice.