Reading group selects: Moravagine by Blaise Cendrars

The Book Beat reading group has selected Moravagine by Swiss-French writer Blaise Cendrars. We will discuss this at our next meeting on Wednesday, April 29 at 7pm. Books are now in stock and discounted 15%.

The reading group discusses books in translation with meetings held monthly at Book Beat on the last Wednesday of the month. Meetings are held both instore and online via Zoom. Our reading group is free and open to the public. If you’d like to attend online please send us your name and email address and we will add you to our list, a link to Zoom online will be sent on the day of the meeting.

“Rip-roaring fiction and imaginative adventuring on all planes of experience.”
— Times Literary Supplement

“Moravagine seeks damnation and extinction with a glee unequaled in literature. The only parallels that come to mind are Céline and Beckett.”
— Sven Birkerts, New Boston Review

“An unbridled picaresque fantasy…full of tenderness, horror, and ink-black jokes of a visual intensity that recall Goya.”
— Financial Times

“How can I convince the sceptic that I was ravished by Cendrars’s Moravagine? How does one know immediately that a thing is after one’s own heart?”
– Henry Miller

This new edition of Cendrars’s underground classic is the first in English to include the author’s afterword, “How I Wrote Moravagine.”

At once truly appalling and appallingly funny, Blaise Cendrars’s Moravagine bears comparison with Naked Lunch—except that it’s a lot more entertaining to read. Heir to an immense aristocratic fortune, mental and physical mutant Moravagine is a monster, a man in pursuit of a theorem that will justify his every desire. Released from a hospital for the criminally insane by his starstruck psychiatrist (the narrator of the book), who foresees a companionship in crime that will also be an unprecedented scientific collaboration, Moravagine travels from Moscow to San Antonio to deepest Amazonia, engaged in schemes and scams as, among other things, terrorist, speculator, gold prospector, and pilot. He also enjoys a busy sideline in rape and murder. At last, the two friends return to Europe—just in time for World War I, when “the whole world was doing a Moravagine.”

Odilon Redon
La Mort: C’est moi qui te rends sérieuse: Enlaçons-nous (Death: It is I who Makes You Serious; Let Us Embrace), plate 20 from the series “La Tentation de Saint-Antoine” (The Temptation of Saint Anthony), 1916

Blaise Cendrars(1887–1961) was the pseudonym of Frédéric Sauser, the Swiss son of a French Anabaptist father and a Scottish mother. As a young man he traveled widely, from St. Petersburg to New York and beyond, and these wanderings proved the inspiration of much of his later poetry and prose. Settled in Paris in 1912, Cendrars published two long poems, “Easter in New York” and “The Transsiberian,” which made him a major figure in the poetic avant-garde. At the outset of World War I, he enlisted in the French Foreign Legion, losing an arm in the battle of the Marnes. A prolific poet, Cendrars was also an exceptional novelist, the author of Moravagine, Gold, Rhum, and The Confessions of Dan Yack, among many other books.

 

,

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *