Jean-Luc Persecuted bookcover

Jean-Luc Persecuted

C F Ramuz 

(Author)

Olivia Baes 

(Translator)
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Description

A novel of love, betrayal, madness, and downfall from an iconic Swiss writer of the early 20th century.

Product Details

PublisherDeep Vellum Publishing
Publish DateAugust 11, 2020
Pages184
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781646050161
Dimensions7.9 X 4.9 X 0.8 inches | 0.5 pounds

About the Author

Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz (born Sept. 24, 1878, Cully, Switz.--died May 23, 1947, Pully, near Lausanne) was a Swiss novelist whose realistic, poetic, and somewhat allegorical stories of man against nature made him one of the most iconic French-Swiss writers of the 20th century. As a young man, he moved to Paris to pursue a life of writing, where he struck up a friendship with Igor Stravinsky, later writing the libretto for The Soldier's Tale (1918). Ramuz pioneered a common Swiss literary identity, writing books about mountaineers, farmers, or villagers engaging in often tragic struggles against catastrophe. His legacy is remembered through the Ramuz Foundation, which grants the literary award Grand Prix C.F. Ramuz.

Reviews

"Through the telescope of time, it is easy to see how navigating both fluidity and fragmentation allowed Ramuz to join those twentieth-century novelists who redefined literature--Proust, Woolf, and Mann."
- Patti M. Maexsen, Asymptote Journal

"Mankind in Ramuz's view can perpetually self-generate instead of self-destruct by embracing an inner beauty that is the source of our self-worth and empathy. He reminds his readers that an eternal state of flux is the only way to uncover those hidden layers and webs of selves, where we can stretch ourselves among others for a more whole and transcendent being."- Jennifer Kurdyla, Music & Literature

"Jean-Luc descends into alcoholism and madness, wandering into the village wearing the helmet of a papal Swiss Guard and carrying a burden that, as the gendarmes chase him into the mountains, transforms the novel into a painful tale of isolation and woe ... . Plainly, even matter-of-factly written, the story is a downer but an affecting one that leaves readers wishing that Jean-Luc had had better luck. Translated for the first time in English, Ramuz's slender story will interest students of early European modernism."-Kirkus Reviews


"In simple, straightforward prose, Jean-Luc Persecuted tells a story as relevant today as it was over one hundred years ago... Ramuz genuinely portrays a heart-wrenching demise that fully envelops the reader."--Beth Mowbray, Nerd Daily

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