A few of you have written in to let us know that John Banville will be appearing at Three Lives & Company Booksellers on May 20. (It's rare for him to leave Dublin.) Look for us in the back of the room - we'll be the stammering, flushed one ... (Thanks to early warning systems Ron Hogan and Keith Arsenault for the heads up!)
Speaking of Banville, a number of you have also written in to advise us of his current review in The New Republic of three novels by Georges Simenon. Thanks to Brian Keaveny and to Dave Lull, who forwarded us a copy, an excerpt of which appears below:
Pietr-le-Letton (1930), the first novel that Simenon published under
his own name, introduced his best-known character, the pipe-smoking
detective Inspector Maigret. Between 1930 and 1973, when he retired
from fiction writing and devoted himself to dictating his memoirs,
Simenon produced more than eighty Maigret novels. It is on these books
that his fame chiefly rests--it has been calculated that half a billion
"simenons," in fifty languages, have been sold; but his finest work is
in the romans durs, or "hard" novels, three of the most striking of
which have now been republished by New York Review Books.
The romans durs are extraordinary: tough, bleak, offhandedly violent,
suffused with guilt and bitterness, redolent of place (Simenon is
unsurpassed as a scene-setter), utterly unsentimental, frightening in
the pitilessness of their gaze, yet wonderfully entertaining. They are
also more philosophically profound than any of the fiction of Camus or
Sartre, and far less self-conscious. This is existentialism with a
backbone of tempered steel.
Well, if you do fly back, you'll meet my mother (she of famed Banville-fan-ness), as that's her local bookstore (literally about ten feet from her apt).
Posted by: SKL | April 06, 2005 at 09:54 AM