[Le cycle romanesque familial et autobiographique 03] • Le Monde À Peu Près
![[Le cycle romanesque familial et autobiographique 03] • Le Monde À Peu Près](/cover/TykhEamTDS_rOCZ9/big/[Le%20cycle%20romanesque%20familial%20et%20autobiographique%2003]%20%e2%80%a2%20Le%20Monde%20%c3%80%20Peu%20Pr%c3%a8s.jpg)
- Authors
- Rouaud, Jean
- Publisher
- Ed Du Minuit
- Tags
- biographie
- ISBN
- 9782707315632
- Date
- 1996-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.19 MB
- Lang
- fr
Jean Rouaud's power to evoke the past is incandescent. His first two universally acclaimed novels, Fields of Glory ("Remarkable" -- New York Times; "Irresistible" -- Boston Globe) and Of illustrious Men ("Amazing" -- Philadelphia Inquirer; "A lovingly written book" -- New York Times), proved he was a worthy successor to the mantle of Proust. The first was an elegy to his grandfather and to the tragic ironies of World War I heroism; the second an elegy to his father, an ordinary man thrown into the extraordinary chaos of World War II. The World, More or Less is a portrait of the writer as a young man: myopic, dreamy, lonely, still grieving the deaths of his father and grandfather and seeking for a way to bring the confusions of adolescent life into focus. His nearsightedness gives him double vision: closing one eye brings clarity, closing the other blurs. Sharing this more-or-less world are Theo and Gyf, lover and friend, one far whom life is mystery, the other who wants to frame it in a camera lens. A crass between The Catcher in the Rye and Flaubert's Sentimental Education, The World, More or Less is a haunting story about growing up.