L'Apocryphe

by Robert Pinget

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The narrator attempts to take up once again "the thread of an obsolete discourse"... "The Apocrypha seems to me not only an extension of Pinget's world but a consummation of it" -John Updike, The New Yorker

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52+ Works 787 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 title
L'Apocryphe
Original publication date
1980

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
843.914Literature & rhetoricFrench LiteratureFrench fiction1900-20th Century1945-1999
LCC
PQ2631 .I638 .A87Language and LiteratureFrench, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literaturesFrench literatureModern literature1900-1960
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Statistics

Members
20
Popularity
1,283,608
Rating
(3.00)
Languages
English, French
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2