London Bridge: Guignol's Band II

London Bridge: Guignol's Band II
Author Louis-Ferdinand Céline
Original title Le Pont de Londres
Translator Dominic De Bernardi
Country France
Language French
Publisher 20 March 1964
Éditions Gallimard
1995 (English)
Pages 410

London Bridge: Guignol's Band II (French: Le Pont de Londres) is a novel by the French writer Louis-Ferdinand Céline, published posthumously in 1964. The story follows Ferdinand, an invalided French World War I veteran who lives in exile in London, where he is involved with questionable people and falls in love with a 14-year-old girl. It is the sequel to Céline's 1944 novel Guignol's Band.

Reception

The book was reviewed in Publishers Weekly in 1995: "Whatever one thinks of Celine's politics, it's hard to deny his position as an innovative, influential and still readable writer." The critic described some of the novel's plot elements, and wrote: "All this may sound distasteful, but this is the hard-edged world so perfectly suited to Celine's slangy, propulsive language, filled with ellipses and exclamation marks[.] Celine at his most grizzly is also Celine at his most maniacally funny[.]" The review ended: "Ferdinand is a semi-autobiographical character—like him, Celine was injured in the war and subsequently went to London—and, perhaps because of this personal connection, there is always a hint of vulnerability under the carapace of Celine's perpetual cynicism."[1]

See also

References

  1. Staff writer (1995-02-27). "Fiction Review: London Bridge by Louis-Ferdinand Celine". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 2012-03-04.


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