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Hervé Le Tellier

Auteur van Anomalie

45+ Werken 1,590 Leden 90 Besprekingen Favoriet van 1 leden

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Fotografie: Piscis13

Werken van Hervé Le Tellier

Anomalie (2020) 1,200 exemplaren
Enough About Love (2009) 131 exemplaren
Electrico W (2011) 41 exemplaren
The Sextine Chapel (2005) 22 exemplaren
All Happy Families: A Memoir (2017) 20 exemplaren
The Intervention of a Good Man (2007) 16 exemplaren
Joconde jusqu'à cent (1998) 14 exemplaren
Winter Journeys (1979) 13 exemplaren
La disparition de Perek (1997) 10 exemplaren
Moi et François Mitterrand (2016) 9 exemplaren
Encyclopædia inutilis (2002) 8 exemplaren
Joconde sur votre indulgence (2002) 8 exemplaren
Sonates de bar (1991) 8 exemplaren
Esthétique de l'Oulipo (2006) 6 exemplaren
Le voleur de nostalgie (1992) 5 exemplaren
Atlas Inutilis (2018) 4 exemplaren
Inukshuk, l'homme debout (1999) 4 exemplaren
Les opossums célèbres (2007) 3 exemplaren
Cités de mémoire (2003) 2 exemplaren
L'orage en aout (2003) 1 exemplaar
La anomalía 1 exemplaar
No hablemos más de amor (2023) 1 exemplaar
Conférence intime 1 exemplaar
Le Poulpe, Tome 8 : La disparition de Perek (2001) — Auteur — 1 exemplaar
The Anonamly 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

McSweeney's Issue 22: Three Books Held Within By Magnets (2007) — Medewerker — 335 exemplaren
Lectures de Romain Gary (2011) — Medewerker — 7 exemplaren

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Völlig anders als erwartet. Mit den vielen losen Fäden, die sich dann irgendwann zusammenfinden, war ich ein bisschen an Stephen King erinnert, allerdings ohne den Gruseleffekt.
Wirklich virtuos...
 
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Katzenkindliest | 69 andere besprekingen | Apr 23, 2024 |
Hmm. Starts out strong and intriguing but your interest gets lost a bit among too many characters. The characters are well-written, which may be the problem—just too much to juggle here for what should be a relatively simple story.
 
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gonzocc | 69 andere besprekingen | Mar 31, 2024 |
I'm not sure if the library employee who put this work in the "similar to 50 Shades of Gray" display just did so because, "Hey, sex", or if they were knowingly being a little subversive, placing a non-erotic work of eroticism coming out of the French intellectualist movement of Oulipo in amidst all the sexual rabble. The latter would be fun.

Anyway, it's an amusing enough little divertisement, each page a very brief lighthearted sketch of a different couple's sexual encounter, the persons involved coming out of a limited pool of characters so that when all the couplings are graphed out you produce a couple of geometric patterns.

Thus form is the main thing and point, as is the Oulipo wont, while the writing is casually amusing, though nothing terribly special. The best chuckle for me:
Sofia and Dennis.
The memory of a scene in the film The Postman Always Rings Twice, directed by Bob Rafelson, in which Frank (Jack Nicholson) takes Cora (Jessica Lange) on the kitchen table, is clearly stimulating Dennis while he sodomizes Sofia on just that same item of furniture. Sofia, for whom sodomy is exciting but not quite orgasmic, is rubbing her clitoris faster and faster. The bottle of olive oil is marked "Cold-Pressed Extra Virgin," but that's irrelevant.

It occurs to Dennis that if he were a praying mantis, his female would now turn round and devour his head. He shivers.
… (meer)
 
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lelandleslie | 1 andere bespreking | Feb 24, 2024 |
Brilliant mix of thriller and science fiction, engaging with a magic moment in which an Air France Boeing and its passengers, travelling from Paris to New York, get duplicated during a storm. The one Boeing lands in March, the duplicated one in June. The duplication raises all kinds of existential problems and questions, in particular for the passengers themselves, the security apparatus and the wider human community. This anomaly is dealt with in different ways. It is treated as a threat, a sign of God, an opportunity to mend ways, or as a sign of the end of time.

The way Le Tellier relates the story is by splitting the book in three parts. In part 1 we get to know various characters that were on the plane. In part 2, the second Air France plane re-appears and is guided to a Military airbase. Here the security forces and two Princeton computer geeks have to execute their own (ludicrous) protocol dealing with such eventualities. The crew and passengers are held in isolation and questioned. Meanwhile their doppelgangers are apprehended and ferried to the air base. In part 3, the various passengers and crew are allowed to engage with their alter egos and work out a new way of dealing with the aftermath of a shared identity. Those who want, can opt for a witness protection program and continue their lives as different persons.

So what struck me, raised my interest? Le Tellier has found an interesting prism, with the duplicating plane, for exploring some existential questions, neatly elaborated in personal cases. First, there is the gimmick of the hired assassin, who goes missing from the hangar (creating a fire, escaping, taking on a different identity), travels back to Paris and kills his alter ego (chopping up his body in acid, making him disappear). Problem fixed. Second, there is the response of the security apparatus (isolation of the June flight, implementation of a silly protocol dreamed up by a couple of nerd students, mobilization of Nobel Prize winners, presidential coordination with Xi Jinping and Macron), which Le Tellier uses to analyse the banality of power (both political and scientific). Third, is the response of society as a whole and religious pundits/fanatics – le Tellier shows how the security forces try to coax consensus out of all religious leaders, crafting a uniform message of harmony and peace. But that proves futile once the religious fanatics go to town on this unusual event: an opportunity to announce the end of times, or take action, such as the futile killing of a young actress and her alter ego after presenting their case in a famous late night talk show. Fourth, and probably most interesting, are the impact of dealing with 3 missing months of life, for a number of key personalities that have been introduced in part 1. What happens if your alter ego fell pregnant, changing the dynamic of a love relationship (well, the non pregnant alter ego decides to cut loose and change her identity, despite secretly hoping to regain her lover). What happens when an obscure writer produces a master piece and kills himself, only for his alter ego to return in public life and enjoy the newly gained fame (well the latter is exactly what happens, and moreover, he exhibits a totally care free view on life while attracting a new love life). What happens when a relationship that was dead in the water anyway, is viewed upon by the disappointed party three months on? (some kind of wisdom shines thru, but also a kind of infinite sadness and a knee-jerk response to warn his alter ego for what is coming and if at all possible to behave differently to save the affair). What happens when your daughter has been abused by her PTSS afflicted dad in the three months of your absence? What happens when a boy suddenly finds himself saddled with two envious moms? (well, he simply proposes a rational time-sharing system that his mom(s) could never have devised). What happens when a patient with fatal pancreatic cancer gets a second chance at saving his own life, through a new procedure? (well, this the saddest case – the man dies again and his brother, wife and kids have to undergo the same painful process twice…). It is in the individual cases that Le Tellier can table and discuss the big questions in life. Brilliant idea.
… (meer)
 
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alexbolding | 69 andere besprekingen | Feb 7, 2024 |

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Statistieken

Werken
45
Ook door
2
Leden
1,590
Populariteit
#16,228
Waardering
3.8
Besprekingen
90
ISBNs
117
Talen
17
Favoriet
1

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