The Lecture

by Lydie Salvayre

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Description

At the City Hall in a small town in the South of France, one man starts his campaign to correct the ills that have overtaken his proud nation by lecuring the town's inhabitants on the art of conversation. In the narrator's opinion, "coversation is a specialty that is most eminently French," an art that should be nurtured and practiced, and can help repair France's reputation. Not to mention being a good conversationalist is extremely useful for seducing women, which is how the narrator show more managed to attract Lucienne, his "superbly lumpish" wife who died two months before giving this lecture. One of the oddest characters in contemporary fiction, the lecturer in this novel can't help but digress about his sad life in the midst of his speech, giving the reader a view of a self-centered man trying to turn one of his greatest faults into a virtue to be forced on everyone else. By turns ironic, hilarious, pathetic, and mortifying, Salvayre's The Lecture is an exuberant example of the exciting fiction being written in France. show less

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Member Reviews

2 reviews
This dry, clever novel is a rambling lecture by a man obsessed with the art of conversation. Peppered in his outrageous speech are little hints that his life is murkier than we realize; by the end, I felt chilled and amused. A slim but dense novel.
½
"et ne rougissez pas à la pensée de ce qu'est le coeur humain"
Le livre ouvre sur ces mots issus des Chants de Maldoror.

Monologue-fleuve d'un érudit veuf qui donne une conférence exaltée dans une petite ville de province sur l'art menacé de la conversation, le grand petit livre de Lydie Salvayre a de quoi surprendre et réjouir le lecteur.

Les intérêts et les conditions favorables de la conversation sont passés au crible pour finalement conduire à des exemples de conversation (politique, littéraire, amoureuse...). Personnage grandiloquent, compassé, critique, pédant, mordant et parfois tendre, il livre ses réflexions face à un public médusé.

Ponctué d'aphorismes :

"La conversation réduit notablement le déficit de la show more Sécurité sociale"

"Les bourgeois autrefois avaient leurs pauvres.
Ce sont désormais les intellectuels qui ont les leurs"

"La conversation est une insomniaque.
Elle empêche le verbe de dormir"

"La conversation est une association sans but lucratif"

son discours est régulièrement dévié par son état psychologique troublé par son récent veuvage, laissant libre cours à des évocations cruelles et hilarantes de sa défunte épouse.

Le texte, plein de sel, pétillant d'intelligence et extrêmement drôle, offre un moment de lecture à la fois stimulant et singulier.

L'écriture fine, nerveuse de Lydie Salvayre sert une fois de plus la solide qualité du contenu.
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Author Information

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32+ Works 700 Members

Some Editions

Coverdale, Linda (Translator)
Rijnaarts, José (Translator)

Common Knowledge

Original title
La conférence de Cintegabelle
Original publication date
1999 (original French) (original French); 2005 (English translation) (English translation)
Original language
French

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
843.914Literature & rhetoricFrench & related literaturesFrench fiction1900-20th Century1945-1999
LCC
PQ2679 .A52435 .C6713Language and LiteratureFrench, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literaturesFrench literatureModern literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
47
Popularity
634,262
Reviews
2
Rating
(3.83)
Languages
Dutch, English, French
Media
Paper
ISBNs
4