Katerina
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- 7,99 €
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- 7,99 €
Publisher Description
1992. Jeune étudiant américain, Jay décide de tout quitter pour aller s’installer à Paris, où il rêve de devenir écrivain. L’inspiration tardant à venir, il se réfugie dans l’alcool, la drogue, enchaîne les rencontres d’un soir et semble plus enclin à multiplier les frasques qu’à écrire l’œuvre vouée à « réduire le monde en cendres », comme professé par son maître Henry Miller. Vingt-cinq ans plus tard, miné par la dépression contre laquelle il lutte quotidiennement, l’écrivain, devenu célèbre, revient sur sa rencontre avec la jeune Katerina, qui n’a cessé de le hanter.
Préquel du très controversé Mille morceaux, écrit dans le même style percutant, Katerina questionne les frontières entre fiction et réalité pour mieux compléter les mémoires de l’écrivain américain le plus sulfureux de notre époque.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Frey (A Million Little Pieces) crafts an underwhelming fictionalized memoir that follows Jay, a young American writer living in Paris and Los Angeles who is determined to write books that will "burn the world down." The narrative jumps between 1992 Paris and 2017 Los Angeles the 15 years in between, in which Jay achieves his dream of becoming a famous writer, pass unexamined. Looking back on his time in Paris, Jay considers his early ambitions and the love affair that informed his best work. After receiving a Facebook message from his former lover, Jay begins to recollect his debaucherous years in Paris in a series of vignettes that read like poor imitations of Henry Miller, rendered in choppy, disjointed prose that readers of Frey's earlier works will recognize. They may also recognize versions of high-profile incidents from Frey's life when they occur in the novel, such as Jay appearing on a talk show to defend himself after the host accuses him of lying about his first book. While the narrative hinges on Jay's thoughts about writing a great book, it does little to convince the reader that Jay is actually a talented writer. This quixotic novel might make some readers reconsider Frey's legacy, but the story itself will leave most wanting.