Fable
by Robert Pinget
37 Members (3.42)
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Description
Fiction. Translated from the French by Barbara Wright. "What can I tell you about FABLE? It is a love story, or rather the story of a betrayal. The man betrayed doesn't cry out for vengeance, he is prostrated. Then he tries to turn the tragedy to ridicule, in order to overcome it. Monsieur Miaille becomes Monsieur Miette ('crumb'), thus he survives, although greatly diminished. Return to the fold (Fantoine) after a short odyssey, and acceptance."--Robert Pinget, in a letter to his show more translator, Barbara Wright show lessTags
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Author Information

52+ Works 786 Members
Before deciding to write professionally, Pinget practiced law in his native city of Geneva and studied painting at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. He is one of the less accessible of the so-called new novelists and has seemed little interested in attracting a large following. Nevertheless, The Inquisitory, awarded the 1962 Prix des Critiques, show more became a bestseller in France. It is essentially a monologue, a deaf old servant's meandering, half-truthful responses to the terse questions of an interrogator seeking information on a man who has vanished. As the old man speaks, he brings to light all of the vice and corruption of what appears to be a placid provincial town. In 1965 Pinget's Quelqu'un (Someone), about a man's search for a scrap of paper, won the Prix Femina. In addition to his work as a novelist, Pinget has also written a number of plays. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1971
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 37
- Popularity
- 781,054
- Rating
- (3.42)
- Languages
- English, French
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 4
























































