Charles Bovary, Country Doctor: Portrait of a Simple Man

Author:   Jean Améry ,  Nate West
Publisher:   The New York Review of Books, Inc
Edition:   Main
ISBN:  

9781681372501


Pages:   184
Publication Date:   04 September 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Charles Bovary, Country Doctor: Portrait of a Simple Man


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Overview

Fans of Flaubert's Madame Bovary will want to read this reimagination of one of literature's most famous failures, Charles Bovary. Part fiction, part philosophy, Charles Bovary, Country Doctor is also a book about love. Jean Amery undertakes one of the most unusual projects in twentieth-century literature- a novel-essay devoted to salvaging the poor bungler, Charles Bovary, from the depredations of his creator, Gustave Flaubert. As a once-promising novelist reduced to hack journalism for two decades after the Second World War, Amery had a particular sympathy for failure, and Charles Bovary- Country Doctor is his phenomenology of the loser, blending fiction and philosophy to assert the moral claims of the most famous, most risible cuckold in all of Western literature. Charles Bovary tells his side, Amery vindicates Flaubert's hated bourgeoisie, and in the end, the Master himself winds up in the docket, forced to account for the implausibility of his own vaunted realism. At the same time, in Charles's words, Amery offers a moving paean to the majesty of Madame Bovary herself, and to the supreme value of love.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jean Améry ,  Nate West
Publisher:   The New York Review of Books, Inc
Imprint:   The New York Review of Books, Inc
Edition:   Main
Dimensions:   Width: 13.00cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 20.50cm
Weight:   0.200kg
ISBN:  

9781681372501


ISBN 10:   1681372509
Pages:   184
Publication Date:   04 September 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Reviews

How lucky we are that this essay-novel of Jean Am ry's, circling around Flaubert's tragically uxorious country doctor, poor dim Charles with his beating heart and ugly hat, is available to English readers now in a nimble translation by Adrian Nathan West. In his half-fictional monologue, half-philosophical tract, Am ry interrogates literature and realism through his obsession with this side character in not just a novel but the novel. A meditation on failure and the loser to rival Thomas Bernhard's. --Kate Zambreno This is the first English translation of the work, which follows in the tradition of Jean Rhys' Wide Sargasso Sea and John Gardner's Grendel, stand-alone novels--not prequels or sequels--approaching a prior tale from a point of view more sympathetic to a major character than that taken in the original...readers will appreciate Am ry's valiant efforts to rehabilitate Charles Bovary and his conventional cohort in a work which is difficult to categorize and even harder to forget. --Kirkus Reviews


How lucky we are that this essay-novel of Jean Am�ry's, circling around Flaubert's tragically uxorious country doctor, poor dim Charles with his beating heart and ugly hat, is available to English readers now in a nimble translation by Adrian Nathan West. In his half-fictional monologue, half-philosophical tract, Am�ry interrogates literature and realism through his obsession with this side character in not just a novel but the novel. A meditation on failure and the loser to rival Thomas Bernhard's. --Kate Zambreno


Author Information

Jean Amery (1912-1978) was born Hans Meier in Vienna, Austria. He was a philosophy and literature student in Vienna and participated in the resistance against the Nazi occupation of Belgium. He was detained and imprisoned for several years in concentration campsm, surviving Auschwitz and Buchenwald and finally Bergen-Belsen, where he was liberated in 1945. He settled in Belgium after the war, and wrote several renowned works, including At the Mind's Limits- Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and Its Realities (1966), On Aging (1968), and On Suicide- A Discourse on Voluntary Death (1976). Nate West is the author of essays, fiction, reviews, and translations that have appeared in publications including 3-AM, McSweeney's, The Times Literary Supplement, and The Los Angeles Review of Books. He is a contributing editor to Asymptote, and his first book is The Aesthetics of Degradation.

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