Patrick Modiano is een Franse auteur wiens werken zich vaak verdiepen in thema's van identiteit, herinnering en ongrijpbare verledens. Zijn schrijven verkent de ambiguïteit van herinneringen en de zoektocht naar waarheid te midden van schimmige historische gebeurtenissen, vaak gesitueerd tegen de achtergrond van het bezette Parijs. Modiano roept meesterlijk een sfeer van mysterie en melancholie op en hanteert een onderscheidende stijl die wordt gekenmerkt door subtiele proza en onopgeloste, maar boeiende raadsels. Lezers worden aangetrokken tot zijn verhalen door zijn analyse van de kwetsbaarheid van het menselijk bestaan en de constante zoektocht naar verbondenheid.
Published in English for the first time, 28 Paradises is the marriage of prose
and painting by Nobel prize-winning author Modiano and his partner, the
illustrator Zehrfuss, revealing not only the individual talents of its
authors, but also the depth of the couple's creative union.
Ring Roads, for which Modiano was awarded the French Academy's Grand Prix du Roman (1972), is the story of a young Jew, Serge, in search of his father, Chalva, who disappeared from his life ten years earlier. He finds him trying to survive the war years in the unlikely company of black marketeers, anti-Semites and prostitutes, putting his meagre and not entirely orthodox business skills at the service of those who have no interest in him or his survival. Ring Roads is a brilliant, almost hallucinatory evocation of the uneasy, corrupt years of the Occupation and like The Night Watch is both cruel and tender - savage in its depiction of the anti-Semitic newspaper editor, the bullying ex-Foreign Legionnaire and the former prostitute, who treat Chalva with ever more threatening contempt; tender in its attempt to understand and identify with the Jew who cannot see the danger he courts.
Catherine, the eponymous heroine, spent her childhood in Paris. In her youth,
she lived with her gentle father, Georges Certitude. The real partners in this
story are the father and daughter who share the simple pleasures of daily
life: sitting in the church square, walking to school, and going to her ballet
class every Thursday afternoon. schovat popis
This early work by the Nobel Prize winner Patrick Modiano relates the story of Lucien Lacombe: a poor boy in Nazi-occupied France who, rebuffed in his efforts to enter the Resistance for a taste of war, becomes a member of a sordid, pathetic group of Fascist collaborators who join the Gestapo in preying upon their countrymen. When Lucien encounters the Horns, a Jewish family from Paris hiding in his provincial town, he must choose between the coarse appeal of violence and his emerging feelings of tenderness for the family's daughter, France.
WINNER OF THE NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE, 2014Haunted by the fate of Dora
Bruder - a fifteen-year-old girl listed as missing in an old December 1941
issue of Paris Soir - Nobel Prize-winning author Patrick Modiano sets out to
find all he can about her.
Presents three short novels which explore the influence of the past, the complexities of human relationships, and the mysterious power of Paris over its residents and visitors.
An amnesic protagonist embarks on a quest for self-discovery, journeying from the idyllic landscapes of Polynesia to the historic streets of Rome. Through this exploration, the narrative delves into themes of memory, identity, and the search for belonging. Patrick Modiano, a Nobel Prize-winning author, weaves a compelling tale that captures the essence of human experience and the elusive nature of personal history.