Showing posts with label Magnan (Pierre). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magnan (Pierre). Show all posts

15 June 2019

Pierre Magnan in Revest-Saint-Martin (04)

Patrick Magnan (1922-2012) was born in Manosque and much inspried by Jean Giono. Thyde Monnier persuaded her editor Juillard to publish his first novel. L'Aube insolite appeared in 1946, although it was La Maison assassinée (1984) which was his most successful.

"'J'ai écrit dans ce pigeonnier la plupart de mes livres ; J'y ai vécu heureux pendant 30 ans.'
Pierre Magnan

1922-2012"






4 November 2018

Pierre Magnan: La Folie Forcalquier (1995)

This takes place at the end of the era of Napoleon III, and is set in and around Forcalquier in Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, with the narrator and protagonist Félicien Brédennes, a herbalist  and something of a quack doctor, something of a petty thief, and a great deal of a lover of numerous women.

And the vocabulary is quite a mountain to climb, with not only archaic expressions but – this being an epic full of the atmosphere and smells of Provence – also the names of many herbs, flowers, etc.

It is also the story of devastating letters, fear, murder, and general mayhem. There are many characters described here, perhaps the most colourful, apart from Brédennes, being the rich highwayman Zinzolin and the sex-loving Aigremoine, with who Brédennes and Zinzolin (her unwitting father) separately share sex romps.

There's a fair amount of blood shed, a great deal of chasing (especially by Brédennes on his horse behind the stolen coffin-shaped buggy), and changing affinities: a long, convoluted story with almost as many twists and turns as the horses themsleves have to undergo.

That, perhaps, is the main problem: at 487 pages, the novel goes on far too long for its own worth: which is a pity, as Pierre Magnan can write a hell of a tale with tremendous jest and confidence.