London Bridge
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- $199.00
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- $199.00
Descripción editorial
A major work by one of France's most important authors of the twentieth century, London Bridge is a riotous novel about the London underworld during the First World War. Picking up where its predecessor Guignol's Band left off, Celine's narrator recounts his disastrous partnership with an eccentric Frenchman intent on financing a trip to Tibet by winning a gas-mask competition; his uneasy relationship with London's pimps and whores and their common nemesis, Inspector Matthew of Scotland Yard; and, most scandalous of all, his affair with a colonel's daughter.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Whatever one thinks of Celine's politics, it's hard to deny his position as an innovative, influential and still readable writer. Originally published in 1965 but never before translated into English, London Bridge continues the journey of the young Ferdinand of Guignol's Band, who, physically and psychologically damaged by his service in WWI, had left France only to fall in with a rough crowd of pimps and petty criminals in London. This sequel jumps right in with Ferdinand and his latest lunatic compatriot, Sosthene de Rodiencourt, answering the equally mad Colonel O'Collogham's advertisement for help designing and testing gas masks. The shysters settle in comfortably with the colonel until Ferdinand's old cronies discover his whereabouts and Virginia, the colonel's 14-year-old nymphet niece, winds up pregnant as a result of Ferdinand's attentions. All this may sound distasteful, but this is the hard-edged world so perfectly suited to Celine's slangy, propulsive language, filled with ellipses and exclamation marks (``right off they start flapping about helplessly, crumple, in twosomes... foursomes... in heaps... snoring away... they need a shot of booze, a pick-me-up!... the gang's dozed off!''). Celine at his most grizzly is also Celine at his most maniacally funny-here, particularly when Centipede, a footpad Ferdinand had killed in Guignol's Band, comes back in all his putrescence to have dinner with Ferdinand and Virginia. Ferdinand is a semi-autobiographical character-like him, Celine was injured in the war and subsequently went to London-and, perhaps because of this personal connection, there is always a hint of vulnerability under the carapace of Celine's perpetual cynicism.