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Three short stories from Bacacay by Witold Gombrowicz
Three Short Stories from Babacay by Witold Gombrowicz. (1928) French version : Le festin chez la Comtesse Fritouille et autres nouvelles. Translated from the Polish by Georges Sédir.
French publisher Folio has this collection of little books at 2€ each to make reader discover forgotten texts or try new writers. They usually are about 120 pages long and cover various types of literature. I bought Le festin chez la Comtesse Fritouille because I’d never read anything by Polish writer Witold Gombrowicz and I wanted to try one of his books.
My copy is a collection of three short stories coming from Bacacay, a larger collection of Gombrowicz’s short stories. This Folio 2€ includes A Premeditated Crime, Dinner at Countess Pavahoke’s and Virginity. The three were written in 1928. The French translation by Georges Sédir follows the translation codes that consist in translating names even if it’s not necessary. This is how you end up with characters named Antoine and Cécile in A Premeditated Crime or a countess Fritouille instead of Pavahoke. According to Google Translate, Pavahoke does mean Fritouille in French but I have no idea what it means and the internet is clueless too.
A Premeditated Crime is the story of a judge who arrives at the estate of Ignace K. They were old schoolmates and have a business meeting about an inheritance affair. When the judge arrives at the estate, he discovers that Ignace K. just died from a heart attack. The judge being a judge can’t help wondering if this death is natural or not. From then on, he’ll do his best to find everything strange and prove that Mr K. was murdered. Is the judge delusional or was Mr K. really killed in cold blood?
Dinner at Countess Pavahoke’s is told by a bourgeois who is invited to the Countess Pavahoke’s exclusive Friday dinners. These dinners are reserved to special guests and are the days where they only eat simple meals made of vegetables. This would be considered as stingy if it were organized by common people but since it’s set up by an aristocrat, it’s fashionable. Follows the description of a cruel and extraordinary diner but writing more about it would spoil the short story.
Virginity is the strange tale of Alice and Paul. They have been engaged for four years and Paul is just back from China to finally marry his fiancée. Paul is obsessed with Alice’s virginity and innocence. She’s 21 but what he loves most about her is this feeling of purity. But Alice’s mind is not as pure as Paul’s would like. I must confess I didn’t understand where Gombrowicz wanted to go with this story. If someone can enlighten me, comments and explanations are welcome.
I enjoyed Gombrowicz’s wits (and I’m not going to try to say this aloud, my French tongue is already in a twist) and his curious ideas for stories. He has a great sense of dark humour.
This is one of my contribution to Marina Sofia’s #EU27 Project – Reading the European Union.
Currently reading
- Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
- The Pen and the Brush: How Passion for Art Shaped Nineteenth-Century French Novels by Anka Muhlstein
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Upcoming billets:
- Snow Country by Kawabata
- La valse des arbres et du ciel by Jean-Michel Guenassia
Other billets
- Three crimes is a charm : England in the Middle Ages, high tech in Virginia and a haunting past in Finland. January 29, 2023
- The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy – great literature. January 21, 2023
- Last Man in Tower by Aravind Adiga – the dark sides of real-estate in Mumbai and of human behaviour. January 15, 2023
- The Hot Spot by Charles Williams – it’s a question of hooks January 8, 2023
- My 2022 reading highlights : another excellent year with books January 1, 2023
- Happy New Year 2023! Bonne année et bonne santé! January 1, 2023
- The Bottle Factory Outing by Beryl Baindridge – it puts the reader on edge December 28, 2022
- Joyeux Noël from France! December 25, 2022
- Five crime fiction books, all different December 21, 2022
- Literary Escapade: the Proust Exhibition at the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris. December 18, 2022
My little boxes
Les copines d’abord are currently reading
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- February: Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann
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