Fable for Another Time explained

Fable for Another Time
Border:yes
Author:Louis-Ferdinand Céline
Title Orig:Féerie pour une autre fois
Translator:Mary Hudson
Country:France
Language:French
Publisher:Éditions Gallimard (French)
University of Nebraska Press (English)
Pub Date:27 June 1952
English Pub Date:2003
Pages:327

Fable for Another Time (French: '''Féerie pour une autre fois''') is a 1952 novel by the French writer Louis-Ferdinand Céline. The narrative recounts Céline's experiences during what seems to be a hypothetical bombing of an area of Montmartre by the allies on the days preceding D-day. The whole of the action of this fairly long narrative lasts no more than twelve hours from the beginning of an evening to the morning after. It was followed by a sequel, Normance, published in 1954.

Writing process

Louis-Ferdinand Céline started to work on the novel in 1945, while he was living in exile in Denmark. At the time he was working on , and had plans for a third book in the Guignol's Band series. Those plans were scrapped when Céline was imprisoned, which made him nostalgic about his time in Montmartre. He had also become more concerned about his literary reputation in France; after supporting the Vichy regime during World War II, Céline had been ignored in France, and was almost forgotten as a writer of any relevance. He therefore decided that he had to write a new original work which would make a serious impact. Fable for Another Time was at various times, as is known through Céline's letters, known as La Bataille du Styx ("The battle of Styx"), Du côte des maudits ("The coast of the damned"), Au vents des maudits ("At the winds of the damned"), and Au vents des maudits pour une autre fois ("At the winds of the damned for another time"), before the writer settled on the final title. The book was meant as a fictionalised memoir as much as a defence speech.

See also

References

Bibliography