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Something to Declare by Julian Barnes
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Something to Declare

by Julian Barnes

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211226,410 (3.63)5
Recently added bywindtonic23, Seamusoz, pheditor, Laurinha, dkdris, roselelie, msteketee, auditor, private library, baoyu
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  pheditor | Oct 21, 2009 |
I bought this book because my wife and I have been to France a couple of times and I thought it would be fun reading the thoughts of this very erudite English author on "France and French culture." The first essay, about a famed Tour de France rider from, I believe, the 1930s, was quite good. But after that one and one or two about French cinema, all the rest were about Gustav Flaubert: about his life, his thoughts, and the insights to be gleaned about him by a careful study of his many surviving letters (sent and received) and other such topics. Well, OK, I guess it's not too surprising that the author of the novel Flaubert's Parrot would be fascinated by Flaubert. And the essays are, in fact, interesting as far as they go, assuming one has an interest in the subject matter. But, really, calling this a collection of essays on France and French culture is misleading. So although the essays are very well written, I can only recommend the collection to readers interested in Flaubert. ( )
  rocketjk | May 21, 2009 |
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Something to Declare has an index as delightful and intriguing as that to Barnes's Letters from London. The same ingenious techniques are deployed.
added by KayCliff | editThe Indexer, Hazel K. Bell (Aug 5, 2009)
 
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Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Dedication
First words
In the spring of 1998 I was on a walking holiday in the Vercors, south of Grenoble.
Quotations
Last words
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Original publication date2002
Important placesFrance
First wordsIn the spring of 1998 I was on a walking holiday in the Vercors, south of Grenoble.
Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 033048916X, Paperback)

Julian Barnes's long and passionate relationship with la belle France began more than forty years ago, and in these essays on the country and the culture he combines a keen appreciation, a seemingly infinite sphere of reference, and prose as stylish as classic haute couture.

Barnes's vision of France-"The Land Without Brussels Sprouts"-embraces its vanishing peasantry; its vanished hyper-literate pop singers, Georges Brassens, Boris Vian, and Jacques Brel ("[he] sang at the world as if it… could be saved from its follies and brutalities by his vocal embrace"); and the gleeful iconoclasm of its nouvelle vague cinema ("'The Underpass in Modern French Film' is a thesis waiting to be written").

He describes the elegant tour of France that Henry James and Edith Wharton made in 1907, and the orgy of drugs and suffering of the Tour de France in our own time. An unparalleled connoisseur of French writing and writers, Barnes gives us his thoughts on the prolific and priapic Simenon, on Sand, Baudelaire, and Mallarmé ("If literature is a spectrum, and Hugo hogs the rainbow, then Mallarmé is working in ultra-violet").

In several dazzling excursions into the prickly genius of Flaubert, Barnes discusses his letters; his lover Louise Colet; and his biographers (Sartre's The Family Idiot, "an intense, unfinished, three-volume growl at Flaubert, is mad, of course"). He delves into Flaubert's friendship with Turgenev; looks at the "faithful betrayal" of Claude Chabrol's film version of Madame Bovary; and reveals the importance of the pharmacist's assistant, the most major minor character in Flaubert's great novel: "if Madame Bovary were a mansion, Justin would be the handle to the back door; but great architects have the design of door-furniture in mind even as they lay out the west wing."

For lovers of France and all things French-and of Julian Barnes's singular wit and intelligence-Something to Declare is an unadulterated joy to read.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)

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