Wartime Writings: 1943-1949

Overview

Published for the first time in english, the World War II notebooks of one of the twentieth century's most renowned literary figures.

For decades it has been known that Marguerite Duras had kept four notebooks in a blue closet in her country home in France. But until now no one understood the importance of the material that she had written in the period between 1943 and 1949. Here are the first drafts of her most famous works, the true stories...
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Overview

Published for the first time in english, the World War II notebooks of one of the twentieth century's most renowned literary figures.

For decades it has been known that Marguerite Duras had kept four notebooks in a blue closet in her country home in France. But until now no one understood the importance of the material that she had written in the period between 1943 and 1949. Here are the first drafts of her most famous works, the true stories behind The Lover, The War, and several other classics. This book is truly the seventh veil to be lifted by Duras in her multivolume autobiography. Each volume has come closer to the raw truth; here at last are the secrets that have remained hidden for all this time.

In these remarkable writings we discover the difficult, poignant circumstances of Duras's upbringing in colonial Vietnam, where her desperate mother was eager to sell her to the man who became known as "the lover." Here too is her repulsion at her first kiss and her unhappiness at this forced liaison. Once she emigrates to France, we follow her life through the war into the Liberation and the horrific events that she observed in the presence of the resistance members, who interrogated and tortured former collaborators. She also tells of the horrendous effect of finding her husband, returning nearly dead from the Nazi concentration camps. Throughout, Duras paints an unflinching picture of this troubled period.

Everyone who has been interested in Duras's life and work will find this an utterly absorbing volume. These first writings are the closest we will get to the truth of Duras's inner life and thoughts at a critical point in her career.
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Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

This engrossing volume of newly published material from French novelist and memoirist Duras's wartime notebooks contains writing as roiled and violent as the years that produced it. Selections range from novella-length down to paragraph- or sentence-long fragments and include stories, polemics, notes and even an ad for a maid; the mix of fiction and nonfiction lets us follow characters, events and themes from Duras's autobiographical writings through various drafts into fictional form. Landmarks include her memoir of youth in Indochina in an impoverished, déclassé French family-beaten viciously by her mother and brother, then embarking on an affair with a repulsive, wealthy Vietnamese man who seems her only ticket out; this supremely rancid vision of colonial rot would become her celebrated novel The Lover. Duras's experiences in the French Resistance yield harrowing stories about the torture of a suspected collaborator, and several nonfiction pieces recount her agonizing wait for her husband's return from a German concentration camp at war's end. Even her quieter writings have an edge to them, as in a study of early morning street life in front of her apartment that sparks a meditation on class warfare. Duras's fans will recognize and thrill to her unique voice as it develops-feverish, sometimes feral, yet pitilessly unsentimental. (Mar.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information
School Library Journal

These writings, described by the editors as "the birth of the oeuvre of Marguerite Duras" (1914-96), were culled from four of the French novelist's notebooks acquired by the Institut de la Mémoire de l'Édition Contemporaine (Inst. of Contemporary Publishing Archives) in 1995. This is the first time they are being published in English (Coverdale is the award-winning translator of Jean Echenoz's Ravel), and readers and scholars with an interest in Duras or an appreciation of her work will find them nothing less than intoxicating. Duras's four "War Notebooks," which she kept in a closet in her French country home, contain autobiographical accounts of her childhood and youth in Indochina, various writing fragments, and drafts of several published works, including the masterpiece The War. The autobiographical entries reveal Duras's material for the successful novel The Lover, while the final pages provide four autobiographical texts and six stories (five of which have never before been published) written around the same time period. A helpful index to people and characters and a detailed table of contents are additional enhancements. Highly recommended for all literature collections.
—Stacy Russo Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781595582003
  • Publisher: New Press, The
  • Publication date: 3/1/2008
  • Pages: 296
  • Product dimensions: 6.30 (w) x 9.30 (h) x 1.30 (d)

Meet the Author

Marguerite Duras (1914-1996) was one of France's most important literary figures. She is the author of such acclaimed novels as The Lover, The Ravishing of Lol Stein, and The Sailor from Gibraltar, as well as the screenplay for Hiroshima, Mon Amour. Linda Coverdale is an award-winning translator whose most recent translation for The New Press was Jean Echenoz's novel Ravel. She lives in New York City.
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Table of Contents

Preface ix

Note on the Transcription xv

Note on the Translation xvii

I The War Notebooks

Pink Marbled Notebook

Introduction 5

Childhood and Adolescence in Indochina 7

Ter of the Militia (Rough Draft) 51

Wife to Marcel 59

Albert of the Capitals (Rough Draft) 61

The Rue de la Gaiete 73

The Sea Wall (Rough Draft) 75

Expecting 77

The Sea Wall (Rough Draft) 79

20th Century Press Notebook

Introduction 93

Theodora 95

The War (Rough Draft) 103

Hundred-Page Notebook

Introduction 125

The War (Rough Draft) 127

Beige Notebook

Introduction 151

The Sea Wall (Rough Draft) 153

The Horror of Such Love (Rough Draft) 159

Vacation with D. 163

Memories of Italy 165

Did Not Die Deported 179

The Sailor from Gibraltar (Rough Draft) 185

Rue Saint-Benoit: Madame Dodin (Rough Draft) 191

II Other Texts

Introduction 227

Boundless Childhood 229

Stories 241

Cambodian Dancers 243

"Is That You, Sister Marguerite?" 247

Horror 251

The Bible 259

The Stolen Pigeons 263

Eda or the Leaves 269

The War Notebooks and the Published Works of Marguerite Duras 281

Index of People and Characters 285

Detailed Table of Contents 291

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