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Chateau D'Argol
Chateau D'Argol | Julien Gracq
5 posts | 4 read | 3 to read
An isolated castle stands in a wild, desolate landscape, surrounded by dark woods. Its new owner, a rich, dissolute young man, has invited his best friend to stay. When he arrives, he brings with him a radiant, seductive and strangely detached young woman. She, in turn, will bring death and destruction to the Chateau d'Argol. With its opulent, atmospheric descriptions of a savage, surreal Breton landscape and its exquisite sense of foreboding, Chateau d'Argol is a work of beauty and terror. Pushkin Collection editions feature a spare, elegant series style and superior, durable components.The Collection is typeset in Monotype Baskerville, litho-printed on Munken Premium White Paper and notch-bound by the independently owned printer TJ International in Padstow. The covers, with French flaps, are printed on Colorplan Pristine White Paper. Both paper and cover board are acid-free and Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified."
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review
Bookwomble
Chateau D'Argol | Julien Gracq
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Pickpick

This is the first Gracq I've read, and the first book he wrote, based on which I've ordered his second. A new favourite author, I think.
In this vibrant translation, his language is poetically florid, but not overblown - violet prose, perhaps, rather than purple - moving from a densely described realism into a dreamlike, at times nightmarish, surreality. Despite, or perhaps because of, the somewhat ambiguous climax, a gothically baroque 5🌟

vivastory I read Gracq many years ago and recall loving his books, especially 4y
Bookwomble I'm going for A Dark Stranger next (which sounds like something Mrs Bookwomble would have an opinion about 🤨), but have read that The Opposing Shore is his most well-regarded book, so with your added recommendation I'll probably get that in, too 😊 4y
25 likes2 comments
quote
Bookwomble
Chateau D'Argol | Julien Gracq
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“She felt herself to be at one of those nodes of the planet's human vibrations where absolute calm, albeit engendered by the juggling interference of contrary motions, is all the more soothing in its perilous instability.”

This sums up the sense of trembling, feverish tension between Albert, Herminien and Heide. It feels like the story is moving toward an inevitable snapping of the cords precariously binding them together.

Bookwomble Illustration of Heide by Jean Carzou 4y
18 likes1 comment
review
Bookwomble
Chateau D'Argol | Julien Gracq
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Pickpick

While the comparison isn't exact, reading of the MC's ride down from the château, through a wind-blasted forest to the desolate strand where the sun leaks light onto a blank, sclerotic sea, put me in mind of the cover of Nico's "Desertshore" album. The song "All That Is My Own" captures the atmosphere of abandonment in Albert's visit to a sand-choked graveyard. Gracq's use of gothic tropes is skilful, so far, rather than formulaic.
#booksandmusic

blurb
Bookwomble
Chateau D'Argol | Julien Gracq
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Starting a new one, a 1938 gothic-surreal novel about a love-triangle (I think) set in a Breton castle and, in the first 20-or-so pages, just overbrimming with sumptuous language.
I've no idea what to call the cocktail, other than delicious - gin, rosso vermouth and grenadine syrup, garnished with maraschino cherries 🍸🍒
Musical accompaniment, some cool jazz/bossa nova by Paul Desmond 🎷😎
I'm feeling as smooth as an oiled otter 😂

TrishB That looks great 🍸 4y
Bookwomble @TrishB It was nice 😋 I'd have had another one, but it's a school day tomorrow! 4y
Centique What a wonderful combo! 😍 4y
See All 6 Comments
Michael_Gee This looked so nice I had to copy you last night. For me it was Lovecraft and a dirty martini, but I too went with bossa nova. 4y
Bookwomble @Centique Book, music, drink and me were all very chilled ❄🧘🏻‍♂️❄😊 4y
Bookwomble @GhostStories Ahh, definitely need something dry rather than sweet with Lovecraft 😊 4y
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review
DentyOne
Chateau D'Argol | Julien Gracq
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Pickpick

An elusive, oneiric tale - thick with florid prose - exceedingly beautiful and mysterious.