Showing posts with label Vialatte (Alexandre). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vialatte (Alexandre). Show all posts

2 April 2019

Alexandre Vialatte: Pas de H pour Natalie (2019)

Greatly enthused by Marie-Hélène Lafon's inclusion in Le Pays d'en haut of an article by Alexandre Vialatte (1901-71 (the dates are revealing)), I opened his collection of many articles (chiefly from La Montagne) and prepared for the fun. Alas, there wasn't any, as I scarcely knew what Vialatte was talking about: the digressive articles, most of between four and six pages each, mostly speak of other people, but unfortunately people who were known in Vialatte's day, but who now are mainly forgotten.

However, I don't give in easily, and although it's far beyond me to take in so much detail of unknown people at one go, I shall continue to dip into this book, and no doubt discover many interesting characters. One such person has been the cartoonist Chaval (1915-68), whose real name was Yvan Francis Le Louarn, and who killed himself a few months after his wife killed herself after he'd told her of his numerous infidelities. His cartoons are odd, often without words, and often (to me at least) impenetrable. Vialatte felt the same, particularly the one of three chemists fleeing from a storm. They could be anyone, but what is comical about this? It provides Vialatte with much fodder for thought. As I'm sure this book will provide me with when I pick it up again.

Links to my Alexandre Vialatte posts:
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Alexandre Vialatte and Amélie Nothomb
Alexandre Vialatte, 13e arrondissement
Alexandre Vialatte: Pas de H pour Natalie

29 March 2019

Marie-Hélène Lafon: Le Pays d'en haut : entretiens avec Fabrice Lardreau (2019)

'Versant intime' is a series of books, directed by Fabrice Lardreau, in which figures from the world of literature, the arts, sciences and travel speak about mountains, nature in general, their travels, and their relationship with the fragile beauty of the world: Lardreau himself is a journalist with La Montagne et Alpinisme along with being the author of ten novels and works of non-fiction. Here, in about the first two thirds of the book, Lardreau asks Marie-Hélène Lafon a number of questions.

Lafon was brought up on an isolated farm in the north of Cantal, her parents being peasant farmers who expected her to move away from the land because they realised that it was the end of the peasant farming industry. She describes her early life and her contact with the mountains and nature, and even though she is a transfuge, a former member of the peasant class now become an academic and a notable novelist, her previous experiences have moulded her, being something unforgettable: her novels have evident autobiographical elements, and she describes some of these.

She also describes her cultural experiences, the books and songs that shaped her life. Following the interviewing, Lafon includes a number of influential 'mountain' readings: Jean Ferrat's song La Montagne about people leaving the mountains, a song she saw as old-fashioned in her early teens, a song her mother liked, but which had an effect on her too; Julien Gracq's experiences of walking in the mountains near to where she lived; Jean Giono in the Auvergne rather than Provence; etc.

The most fascinating extract Lafon gives us here is from a collection called Vialatte à la montagne (published in 2011) in which Alexandre Vialatte (1901-71) speaks about Puy-de-Dôme. Lafon's parents used to buy the daily local paper La Montagne, which Lafon didn't read. Vialatte had a weekly column in the paper in which he may have written about mountains, or anything which took his fancy to write about. But even if he was writing about mountains, they may well have just been an excuse for him to digress. In the article Vialatte, in a remarkably amusing excuse for exaggerating the truth about the height of the Puy-de-Dôme, moves on to the Larousse encyclopaedia's mentioning Saint-Ferréol-sur-Arzon having a population of 2001. Vialatte points out that while the count was being made, Larousse forgot that the baker's wife had run off to Paris with the postman's brother-in-law, the butcher's wife had had twins, the sexton had died of cold, and the police sergeant had been eaten by a wolf. (Needless to say, Saint-Ferréol-sur-Arzon doesn't exist, but the reader gets a strong idea of Vialatte's humour.)

And the reader gets a strong idea of Marie-Hélène Lafon's psychology in this highly readable book. I shall be reading more of her work, although the Vialatte excerpt reminds me that I have a book of his his which contains many of his writings from La Montagne: I shall read that first.

Links to my Marie-Hélène Lafon posts:
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Marie-Hélène Lafon: Le Pays d'en haut : entretiens avec Fabrice Lardreau
Marie-Hélène Lafon: Sur la photo
Marie-Hélène Lafon: Les Derniers indiens
Marie-Hélène Lafon: L'Annonce

5 October 2016

Alexandre Vialatte, 13e arrondissement, Paris

'ALEXANDRE VIALATTE
ÉCRIVAIN
ET JOURNALISTE
1901–1971
A HABITÉ
CETTE MAISON
DE 1934 À 1966'

158 rue Léon-Maurice-Nordmann. Alexandre Vialatte's published work is almost entirely posthumous, although interestingly a multi-authored novel, Le Roman des douze, was published in 1957, for which he wrote the second chapter. The other contributors were Jean Dutourd, Jules Romains, Pierre Bost, Jean-Louis Curtis, Louise de Vilmorin, Paul Vialar, André Beucler, André Berry, Yves Gandon, Michel de Saint Pierre, and Gilbert Sigaux.

Links to my Alexandre Vialatte posts:
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Alexandre Vialatte and Amélie Nothomb
Alexandre Vialatte, 13e arrondissement
Alexandre Vialatte: Pas de H pour Natalie

18 January 2011

Alexandre Vialatte and Amélie Nothomb

In several of her novels, Amélie Nothomb mentions Alexandre ('I'm a notoriously unknown writer') Vialatte in passing. He was certainly unknown to me, but the fact that he was the man who introduced the French to Kafka and translated nine of his works makes good Nothombian sense. He also wrote a number of imaginative works, which according to editor Pascal Sigoda make the re-discovery of the 'kingdom of childhood' remarkably vivid. Yes, very Nothombian.

Links to my Alexandre Vialatte posts:
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Alexandre Vialatte and Amélie Nothomb
Alexandre Vialatte, 13e arrondissement
Alexandre Vialatte: Pas de H pour Natalie