A Novel by the 2014 Nobel Laureate in Literature
Honeymoon
by Patrick Modiano
See the Book at Amazon.com
About the Book
Nobel Prize Winner Patrick Modiano constructs 'a haunting tale of quiet intensity' as described by The Review of Contemporary Fiction. Honeymoon parallels the stories of Jean B., a filmmaker who abandons his wife and career to hole up in a Paris hoteland of Ingrid and Rigaud, a refugee couple he'd met twenty years before, whose mystery continues to haunt him.
Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal says: "A winner of France's prestigious Prix Goncourt, Modiano is the author of 17 novels as well as the screenplay for Louis Malle's noteworthy film, Lacombe Lucien. In this slight but probing novel, a middle-aged man decides to take a "honeymoon." Scheduled to fly to Brazil on a job, documentary filmmaker Jean B. instead slips away to Milan and then returns to a Parisian suburb. There he attempts to trace the life and death (by suicide) of a woman named Ingrid, whom he met while hitchhiking to Saint-Tropez. World War II is raging, and Ingrid, who is traveling with her husband, clearly has something to hide. Ingrid's mystery is not rewardingly played out, but Modiano is a wonderfully evocative writer--there's a nice touch of menace throughout, and the cool, collected writing feels like a salve. For literary collections."
Kathryn Broderick, Booklist writes: "In the latest work of French novelist Modiano, the narrator, Jean Bo, is a middle-aged maker of documentary films who has traveled the world. The day arrives--as he knew it would--when his globe-trotting life with his wife loses all meaning, and Jean seeks anonymity in the suburbs of Paris. There he passes time alone and in silence, slipping easily between the past and the present. And in avoiding the future, Jean tries to determine exactly when it was that summer lost its lightness and began to give him a "sense of emptiness and absence." His reverie, which is the novel, consists mostly of composing a mental obituary for a woman he met 20 years earlier, during World War II. Her tale, revealed carefully over the length of the narrative, is a beautiful example of Modiano's fluid storytelling and his ability to move seamlessly between Paris and the Cote d'Azur, childhood and adulthood, peacetime and wartime."
About Patrick Modiano, 2014 Nobel Laureate
Winner of the 2014 Nobel Prize in Literature, Patrick Modiano was born in Paris in 1945. He is the author of numerous novels, plays, and children's books as well as the screenplay for Louis Malle's celebrated film Lacombe Lucien.
Missing Person, widely considered his masterpiece, was originally published in 1978 and was awarded the Prix Goncourt, France's premier literary prize
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The New York Times review:
"The best place to fling oneself into Mr. Modiano's oeuvre."
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