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Bernard du Boucheron

Auteur de Court serpent

7 oeuvres 155 utilisateurs 7 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Bernard du Boucheron

Court serpent (2004) 141 exemplaires
Coup-de-Fouet (2006) 4 exemplaires
Salaam La France (2010) 4 exemplaires
Vue mer: roman (2009) 3 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Nationalité
France

Membres

Critiques

It was an easy compulsive read. It was also a pointless catalogue of human degradation. Perhaps what made the book special was some literary style which couldn't be translated.
 
Signalé
soraxtm | 6 autres critiques | Jun 18, 2019 |
In which a pompous churchman sets out on an expedition to check up on the spiritual and material conditions among a Christian settlement in the far reaches of the Arctic, finding there an impoverished community with little hope or spiritual ardor, whereupon he inflicts a series of punishments which are violent and humiliating. All of this is described in a mock-heroic simulation of a medieval religious or military chronicle. For an added frisson of violence and desperation, the expedition's atrocities are interrupted by a further penetration into an even more remote region which ends in near-disaster and a full dose of the standard cliches of survival epics. This is one plenty crazy book. To me, it had little to recommend it except for the faux-epic style and the deadpan black humor, and even that got old eventually. To find the book at all enjoyable, one would also have to be considerably less squeamish than I, though I am aware that many such individuals exist.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Big_Bang_Gorilla | 6 autres critiques | Jun 5, 2019 |
Literary prizes are strange things. This novel won the Grand Prix du roman de l’Académie française in 2004, which led me to expect something rather brilliant, but it fell gloomily short of expectations. Austere, cold and brutal, it tells the story of the medieval Catholic priest Insulomontanus, who is dispatched to New Thule (Greenland) to minister to the faithful. The New York Times regarded the book as a tour-de-force of black humour, but I found it an increasing slog of horrific cruelty and almost unbearable suffering. Framed as Insulomontanus’s grovelling report back to his master, it plays deftly with notions of the unreliable narrator – but that in itself isn’t enough to transform this monotonous miserable story into an engaging read...

For my full review, please see my blog:
https://theidlewoman.net/2018/03/18/the-voyage-of-the-short-serpent-bernard-du-b...
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
TheIdleWoman | 6 autres critiques | Mar 18, 2018 |
A report, based on the untrustworthy rantings of a cleric, of a descent into the frozen hell of Greenland during a little Ice Age. Through the return of a cleric to a distant colony in Greenland, with which communication has been absent for 50 years, Boucheron bares the hypocrisy of the medieval Church through often humorous musing of an increasingly mad cleric. It's not "laugh out loud" humorous; it's more ferocious and uncomfortable. A parable for the hubris of the present.
½
 
Signalé
kewing | 6 autres critiques | May 8, 2009 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Membres
155
Popularité
#135,097
Évaluation
½ 3.3
Critiques
7
ISBN
18
Langues
3

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