The Man in a Hurry
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Pierre ruins everything-friendships, love, fatherhood-in his headlong race against time. As he rushes through life, he fails to appreciate those things that are of true value-the tendernesses shown to him by his wife, Hedwige, the poetry of the world. He burns himself up, and burns up those around him, in a constant striving for goals that change as soon as he reaches them. Too late, he will realize that in his haste, he has been hurrying only to arrive more quickly at a meeting with death.
Pushkin Collection editions feature a spare, elegant series style and superior, durable components. The Collection is typeset in Monotype Baskerville, litho-printed on Munken Premium White Paper and notch-bound by the independently owned printer TJ International in Padstow. The Man in a Hurry is the first hardcover release in the Pushkin Collection line.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The reputation of Morand a French modernist on the scale of Proust and Celine has suffered as the result of the author's collaboration with the Nazi Party in Vichy France, yet Pushkin Press's gorgeous new edition of Morand's masterpiece, written in 1941, is a shockingly clever farce. Pierre Niox is an antiques dealer who suffers from a curious affliction: he insists on doing everything quickly, which puts him at odds with other human beings. Haste isn't just Niox's cardinal virtue, it is his lifestyle; he lives "quickly and badly," turns up at the death beds of the wealthy just in time to swindle them, and treats patience as a foreign concept. With no time for friends, Niox seems destined for the exclusive company of the strange artifacts with which he surrounds himself. Then he falls in love suddenly, of course with Hewige de Boisros and is forced to decide if any woman is worth waiting for. As marriage, pregnancy, and family drama ensue, Niox realizes he may be too quick for the modern world. And yet he is equally sure that, if he slows down, even for a moment, he will die or, worse, miss a new opportunity. This is a strange book, written in prose as speedy as its impossible hero, and Morand deserves to be widely revisited both for the ageless appeal of his style and the specific (sometimes worrying) portrait of human nature at war with 1940s modernity.