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Pierrot Mon Ami

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Pierrot Mon Ami, considered by many to be one of Raymond Queneau's finest achievements, is a quirky coming-of-age novel concerning a young man's initiation into a world filled with deceit, fraud, and manipulation. From his short-lived job at a Paris amusement park where he helps to raise women's skirts to the delight of an unruly audience, to his frustrated and unsuccessful love of Yvonne, to his failed assignment to care for the tomb of the shadowy Prince Luigi of Poldevia, Pierrot stumbles about, nearly immune to the effects of duplicity.


This "innocent" implies how his story, at almost every turn, undermines, upsets, and plays upon our expectations, leaving us with more questions than answers, and doing so in a gloriously skewed style (admirably re-created by Barbara Wright, Queneau's principle translator).

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 1, 1989
      Originally published in France in 1942 and in England in 1950, this novel's pared down, often vulgar language is supplemented by highly inventive word plays and snippets of philosophy. Pierrot is a Chaplinesque figure who works at a series of marginal jobs for an amusement park. He competes with his friend Paradis for the affections of the owner Pradonet's daughter and finds himself on the fringes of a running battle between Pradonet and his nemesis, Monsieur Mounnezergues, the guardian of the tomb of a Poldevian prince located just outside the amusement park. When Uni Park mysteriously burns down, all the characters find their lives disruptedexcept for Pierrot, who continues to muddle along as usual. A highly stylized novel, in spite of its random plotting, Pierrot never had the critical and popular success of the later Zazie. Queneau has long been considered by the French to be a writer of ingenuity, wit and singular intelligence. His works, possibly because of their special Gallic sensibility, have not received the same attention abroad.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 1, 1989
      Pierrot is a Chaplinesque figure who works at a series of marginal jobs for an amusement park, and competes with his friend Paradis for the affections of the owner's daughter. ``Originally published in France in 1942 and in England in 1950, this novel's pared down, often vulgar language is supplemented by highly inventive word plays and snippets of philosophy,'' said PW .

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  • English

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