Marshlands by Damion Searls - ISBN: 9781681374727
Paperback
A writer writes about writing, and it’s hilariously self-aware.

$26.14

  • Paperback

    96 pages

  • Release Date

    16 March 2021

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Summary

A slim but powerful work of metafiction by a Nobel Prize-winning French writer and intellectual.

André Gide is the inventor of modern metafiction and of autofiction, and his short novel Marshlands shows him handling both forms with a deft and delightful touch. The protagonist of Marshlands is a writer who is writing a book called Marshlands, which is about a reclusive character who lives all alone in a stone tower. The narrator, by contrast, is anything but …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781681374727
ISBN-10:1681374722
Author:Damion Searls, André Gide
Publisher:New York Review Books
Imprint:New York Review Books
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:96
Release Date:16 March 2021
Weight:172g
Dimensions:203mm x 127mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“I don’t understand a single thing in Marshlands . Did I write the book?” –Andr

“I don’t understand a single thing in Marshlands. Did I write the book?” —André Gide”… there’s something compelling in Gide’s perception that all of us are trapped, regardless of the pandemic, in some kind of lifelong lockdown, the days essentially featureless, relieved only by trivialities like our meaningless work, our predictable cultural products and our irrelevant public affairs.” —Ken Kalfus, The New York Times Review“First published in 1895, Marshlands itself is ‘always so interesting,’ an antic anti-novella about writing, friendship, envy, and ambition that is as crisply funny as anything written since. According to Dubravka Ugrešić, Gide called it a sotie, ‘the old carnival genre, a street-fair farce, a Feast of Fools,’ distancing it from his weightier offerings; Damion Searls’s new translation makes you hunger for a feast of soties.” —Ed Park, “Best Books of the Year,” Bookforum“The mistake would be to call André Gide the prophet of everything that followed him… He is at the same time hard to take seriously and hard to fathom, difficult to trust and impossible not to admire. He is astounding, confounding… . Gide himself defies categorization: too modernist for the belle époque scholars, too realist (or too postmodern?) for the modernist ones, too communist for his mid-career contemporaries, not communist enough for his late ones. To paraphrase Ugrešić, who has written the introduction to the new translation of Gide’s 1895 Marshlands, whatever Gide is, he is also more than that.” —Ben Libman, The Los Angeles Review of Books“Marshlands is one of the few books I would rewrite word for word as my own, if I could.” —Dubravka Ugresic“Gide’s 1895 novel Marshlands … in the lightest, most Parisian way foreshadows the 20th-century preoccupation with intertextuality, books-within-books, perilously shifting levels of reality and the blurring between genres—between autobiography and fiction, for instance, or essay and récit.” —Edmund White, London Review of Books“Marshlands is an odd book, audaciously experimental for its time and uncommonly well suited to ours… . [Marshlands is] autofiction’s progenitor and irreverent masterwork… a sendup of writing itself, encompassing the futility, arrogance, and alienation that make up the strange impulse to see one’s thoughts in print.” —Nolan Kelly, Hyperallergic

About The Author

Damion Searls

Andre Gide (1869-1951) was a prolific author of novels, short stories, poetry, plays, travel writing, and autobiography. Though he entered the world of letters as a prominent figure in the symbolist movement, Gide later turned toward a more confessional and exploratory form, ruminating on questions of morality, sexuality, desire, religion, and the nature of the self in his work. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1947.

Damion Searls has translated eleven books for NYRB Classics, including Uwe Johnson’s four-book novel Anniversaries (published in two volumes). This is his second translation of Gide’s Marshlands; he also rewrote it as “56 Water Street,” the first short story in his collection What We Were Doing and Where We Were Going.

Dubravka Ugresic is the author of seven works of fiction, including The Museum of Unconditional Surrender and Baba Yaga Laid an Egg, and six collections of essays. Her most recent book is The Age of Skin- Essays. In 2016 she received the Neustadt International Prize for Literature for her body of work.

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