Atmospheres Apollinaire
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Short-listed for the 1988 Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction, Ottawa-Carleton Book Award and Trillium Book Award Paris, the City of Light, was once the scene of a brilliant magnesium flare, host to the belle epoque from 1900 to 1914. Tempting poets, painters, writers, and composers from across Europe, the city relied on one man to move among them all-Guillaume Apollinaire. His contemporaries called him brilliant, mad, whimsical. He was the bastard son of an Italian cavalry officer and a Polish woman addicted to gambling, but nevertheless let it be rumoured around Paris that he was the son of the pope.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
French first novelist Belloc, writing a curt minimalist prose, pulls the reader fast into the callous Parisian working-class world of his protagonist, Denis, who at 11 hangs around public urinals to trade sex with men. Denis cannot forgive his father, an amateur boxer, for dying and deserting him in infancy; his mother, referred to as ``she,'' likes to park Denis and his brother, Alain, at a children's farm for the summer. Unsurprisingly, Denis is pervaded by a sense of ``absence.'' When his mother marries a coarse tough called the Spaniard, Denis and his stepfather come to blows. Denis and Alain, often in trouble and in jail, resign themselves to petty crime and brutality. Denis welcomes his role as a male prostitute, cruising the seedy, neon-lit boulevards. Denis's random affairs and growing emotional numbness are convincingly portrayed, as is his short-lived attachment to Gloria, a ``hormone-fed'' drag queen who consoles him with mothering and lullabyes. Less believable are Denis's uncaring real mother's characterization as a painter and her encouragement of his creativity with gifts of art supplies. Episodic in structure, the novella takes Denis abroad with a new patron, Nono the Greek. Apparently at a loss for an ending, the author concludes in scattershot style. Despite its flaws, Neons resonates with an authenticity that is raucous, sad and racy.