Hotel Acropolis Explained

Hotel Acropolis
Author:Pierre Drieu La Rochelle
Title Orig:Une femme à sa fenêtre
Translator:Patrick Kirwan
Country:France
Language:French
Publisher:Éditions Gallimard
Pub Date:1929
English Pub Date:1931
Pages:284

Hotel Acropolis is a 1929 novel by the French writer Pierre Drieu La Rochelle. The French title is Une femme à sa fenêtre, which means "a woman at her window". The narrative is set in Athens and revolves the love affair between the wife of a French diplomat and a young communist leader who is sought by the police for a terrorist attack he has committed.

Drieu was himself a communist at the time he wrote the novel, but the communist character is portrayed as a man who seeks adventure and action rather than a Marxist hero. This kind of character, the political adventure seeker, here appears for the first time in the author's oeuvre and would be used several times in his subsequent works.[1]

The novel first appeared in the left-wing weekly La Voix in 1929 and was published as a book by Éditions Gallimard the same year. An English translation by Patrick Kirwan was published in 1931.[2] The book was adapted into the 1976 film A Woman at Her Window directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cantier, Jacques. 2011. French. Pierre Drieu la Rochelle. Paris. Perrin. 70. 9782262036126.
  2. Book: [Une Femme à sa fenêtre.] Hotel Acropolis]. WorldCat. 559821854 . 2014-07-29.
  3. Web site: Une Femme à sa fenêtre. French. AlloCiné. Tiger Global. 2014-07-29.