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Jean-Pierre Naugrette

Auteur de Le crime étrange de Mr Hyde

10+ oeuvres 15 utilisateurs 3 critiques

Œuvres de Jean-Pierre Naugrette

Oeuvres associées

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Le chien des Baskerville [Chefs d'oeuvre universels, Gallimard jeunesse] (1902) — Traducteur, quelques éditions; Commentaires — 3 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Nationalité
France
Pays (pour la carte)
France

Membres

Critiques

A meta-literary fantasy, following Le crime étrange de Mr Hyde (1998) and Les hommes de cire (2002). Hyde is the first-person narrator of three of the chapters and we learn that Sherlock Holmes went to school with the future Dr Jekyll. Other allusions and imitations come from Wilde, Hitchcock, and Borges within the framework of a detective story constantly undermined by fantasy and metatextual playfulness. Houses are fantastic labyrinths that not only contain symmetrical structures but are doubled by elaborate doll’s houses (which one of the characters collects); similarly, the characters (as in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde) are frequently doubled by others yet also equivalents of each other.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
richard_dury | Apr 7, 2018 |
detective story version, a pastiche/homage to Victorian literature by a Stevenson scholar; organized in 10 chapters like JH, the first nine a first person narrative (by Hyde addressed to Utterson), the last a third person narrative (so reversing S’s structure); Hyde alternates between referring to himself in the first and the third person; the game of allusions and quotations includes Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Conan Doyle and T.S. Eliot, though undoubtedly there are many others.
 
Signalé
richard_dury | Mar 29, 2018 |
A narrative symphonie fantastique sharing affinities with Calvino, Borges and the graphic work of Escher, which borrows and elaborates themes and phrases from numerous sources including Stevenson’s Jekyll and Hyde. The labyrinth-like text (including a superb chapter inside an imaginary labyrinth) is divided into eight unnumbered but titled chapters with five or six narrators (there is a reason for this uncertainty). We find not only Utterson, Jekyll and Hyde but also (as in Naugrette’s earlier work Le crime étrange de Mr Hyde – a volume which is found in the bookcase of Jekyll’s former cabinet in the present work) Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson, and here also (aboard ship) Billy Bones, and (in the Indian chapters) Secundra Dass (from Ballantrae) and Mr. Murthwaite (from The Moonstone). The setting moves from London (Ch. 1-3), to aboard ship (Ch. 4-5), India (Ch. 6-7), and back to London (Ch. 8). Of Jekyll and Hyde, it is the formal characteristics above all (self-reference, patterns of repetition and mirroring, juxtapositions, play of text and paratext etc.) that are implicitly commented on. At the same time the narrative is skilfully pursued and keeps the close attention of the reader right up to the ingenious and multiple turns and twists of its astounding end.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
richard_dury | Mar 29, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
10
Aussi par
2
Membres
15
Popularité
#708,120
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
3
ISBN
7