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Réjean Ducharme (1941–2017)

Author of The Swallower Swallowed

14 Works 484 Members 7 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Réjean Ducharme was born in St-Félix-de-Valois, Canada on August 12, 1941. He was an author and playwright. His first novel, L'Avalée des Avalés (The Swallower Swallowed), was published in 1966 and received the Governor General's Award. His other novels included Le Nez Qui Voque, L'Océantume, show more La Fille de Christophe Colomb, L'Hiver de Force, Les Enfantômes, Dévadé, Va Savoir, and Gros Mots. He received several awards including the Quebec-Paris, the Gilles-Corbeil Prize and the Athanase-David Prize. In 1982, he received a Governor General's Award for the play Ha Ha! His other plays included Le Marquis Qui Perdit and Prenez-Nous et Aimez-Nous. He wrote the screenplays for the films Les Bons Débarras and Les Beaux Souvenirs. He also anonymously wrote the lyrics for multiple songs by Robert Charlebois and Pauline Julien. In 2000, he was appointed an officer of the Ordre National du Québec. He died on August 21, 2017 at the age of 76. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Works by Réjean Ducharme

The Swallower Swallowed (1966) 216 copies, 2 reviews
Miss Take (1967) 55 copies, 2 reviews
Wild to Mild (1973) 48 copies, 1 review
Dévadé (1990) 32 copies, 1 review
Go Figure (1994) 31 copies
OCÉANTUME (L') (1998) 24 copies
Gros mots (1999) 20 copies, 1 review
Romans (2022) 10 copies
Les enfantômes (1976) 10 copies
HA HA (1982) 8 copies
Wild to mild (1980) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1941-08-12
Date of death
2017-08-21
Gender
male
Education
Clerics of St-Viateur
Occupations
novelist
playwright
lyricist
Awards and honors
Grand Prix national des Lettres (1999)
Prix Athanase-David (1994)
Nationality
Canada
Birthplace
Saint-Félix-de-Valois, Québec, Canada
Place of death
Montréal, Québec, Canada
Associated Place (for map)
Québec, Canada

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
Réjean Ducharme writes:

But yesterday, before falling asleep, I had some serious thoughts about ideas, or (take your pick) some serious ideas about thoughts. Here they are. An idea is not as immobile, powerless, and docile as you think; it acts, engenders, and arranges; it shapes and comprises its own dynamism; it runs, and runs all by itself. Furthermore, at the moment of its conception, the idea splits in two; that is, as soon as it is born, it works toward its own materialization and show more toward the materialization of the opposite idea. It tends simultaneously toward both poles, and, if we do not judge it, do not stop it, it carries us along in both directions. But in the case of most civilized beings, there operates automatically upon their awareness of the idea, a choice, a violent revolt against one or the other of these two impulses that it gives rise to: they think it's crazy to devote yourself simultaneously to the north and the south, to the right and the left, to slowness and swiftness. In others, of a younger, purer, less sclerotic intellect, the possibility of a double action in opposite directions is perfectly clear, perceptible, logical, and understood. Why, in addition to moving and being moved in its own direction, is the idea moving and being moved in the opposite direction? Because it is the nature of the soul, an avidly creative will, to represent spontaneously for itself in the form of ideas all the possibilities that an object offers to its action, and to want to accomplish all of them by this very fact. The soul cannot not want what it imagines: there is no such thing as unwill. When you don't want to, all you're doing is not doing what you want to do. This explanation doesn't elucidate anything. For example, I simultaneously feel both the need to see Chateaugué and the need to tell her to go hang herself somewhere else. But those are things that are too subtle for civilized beings. You'll understand, perhaps, if I say that you feel, under the influence of two simultaneous impulses born of the very same idea, both the need to do good and the need to do evil. My thoughts are so serious and subtle! He's so afraid of not being understood and appreciated! Enough! It's September 14

[P.S. Is 'Miss Take' really the best English translation of the title 'Le nez qui voque'?]
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Très sombre, mais sans la poésie de ses autres romans
Jeux de mots et douleur hyper-sensible; un mélange décoiffant
½
> Je suis à lire une lecture de saison : I.'Hiver de Force, de Réjean Ducharme. Et j'en gèle de mépris, le temps du mépris de tout et de moi c'est ce qui me préoccupe le plus en ce moment. Il parai! que se suicider c'est assassiner en même temps ceux qui nous aiment. Donc je ne me suiciderai pas cette année Je n'y croirai pas tant et aussi longtemps que je ne l’aurai pas fait. Remettons-nous en à mon ami Georges, l'astrologue de Mainmise a l’opposé du professeur Gazon (le prol show more Grass de CKVI et Photo-Police): selon ma carte du ciel. J'en ai encore pour 50 ans à vivre. Quelle job!
Mainmise, février 1974, (p. 4)
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Associated Authors

David Drummond Cover designer

Statistics

Works
14
Members
484
Popularity
#51,010
Rating
4.0
Reviews
7
ISBNs
42
Languages
5
Favorited
1

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