Le Procès-Verbal (English title: The Interrogation) is the debut novel of French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio, about a troubled man named Adam Pollo who "struggles to contextualize what he sees" and "to negotiate often disturbing ideas while simultaneously navigating through, for him, life’s absurdity and emptiness".[1]
Author | J. M. G. Le Clézio |
---|---|
Original title | Le Procès-Verbal |
Translator | Daphne Woodward |
Cover artist | Jonathan Nicholl |
Language | French |
Publisher | Gallimard Hamish Hamilton (UK) Atheneum (US) |
Publication date | 1963 |
Publication place | France |
Published in English | 1964 |
OCLC | 27088925 |
Followed by | Le Jour où Beaumont fit connaissance avec sa douleur |
In 2022, the novel was included on the "Big Jubilee Read" list of 70 books by Commonwealth authors, selected to celebrate the Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II.[2]
Subject
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The novel is about Adam Pollo, a loner man who had been marginalized from society. His long hair and his beard make him appear a beggar. Pollo is a former student who suffers from amnesia. He does not know whether he was perhaps a deserter from the army or if he has escaped from a psychiatric ward. Le Clézio wrote:
[He] was trying to remember something pertaining to what happened ten years ago: maybe a phrase, maybe a tell-tale sign from the army, maybe a name or a place which would indicate just when it occurred and waiting, waiting (thinking, thinking) to come up with where it might have happened.[3]
He breaks into an empty seaside villa. He visits the town at rare intervals and as briefly as his scant purchases (of cigarettes, biscuits, or even beer) require. Soon, lack of human contact affects him like a drug and he experiences other modes of being: through a dog's or rat’s eyes, states of heightened consciousness which build up into a terrifying world of glaring hallucinatory experience. Then Adam addresses a small crowd in the town. His unnerving rhetoric ends in his arrest and commitment to an asylum. And there the interrogation begins.
Awards
edit- Written when Le Clézio was 23, this novel was shortlisted for the prix Goncourt.
- Received the prix Renaudot in 1963.
- Considered in the final stage for the Prix Formentor.[4]
Publication history
editSeven editions published between 1988 and 2004 in 4 languages and held by 766 libraries worldwide.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "The Interrogation by J. M. G. Le Clézio, translated by Daphne Woodward". John Madera fiction. 2009-01-01. Retrieved 2009-02-09.
- ^ "The Big Jubilee Read: A literary celebration of Queen Elizabeth II's record-breaking reign". BBC. 17 April 2022. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
- ^ "Jean-Marie-Gabriel LE CLÉZIO (France)"Le procès-verbal "" (in French). comptoirlitteraire. 2007. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
il «essayait de se souvenir de quelque chose qui le rattachait aux dix années d'avant : une phrase, un tic militaire, un nom de lieu qui lui indiquerait à coup sûr quel avait été son emploi du temps, et, enfin, enfin, plus tard, d'où il arrivait
- ^ Sturrock, John (January 9, 1964). "Le Proces-Verbal". The Times Literary Supplement. Archived from the original on June 16, 2011. Retrieved 2008-11-04.
Both ...novels, one by Mario Vargas Llosa... the other by a young Anglo-Frenchman, were concerned in the final stages of the judging for the Prix Formentor last May, La Ciudad y los Perros (The Time of the Hero) narrowly failing to win the prize
- ^ "Most widely held works by J.-M. G Le Clézio". OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. 2008. Retrieved 15 December 2008.