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Eugene Savitzkaya

    L'œuvre d'Eugène Savitzkaya se distingue par une luminescence poétique qui éclaire le quotidien, puisant son inspiration dans les contes de sa mère et ses premières rencontres avec le Surréalisme. Sa prose, souvent fragmentée et répétitive, évite l'analyse psychologique au profit d'une observation méticuleuse et de la célébration des 'miracles quotidiens'. Il crée des 'machines à mots' visant à capturer l'essence de l'instant présent et l'expérience sensorielle du monde. D'une voix distinctive, parfois sombre mais toujours sensuelle, Savitzkaya chante la métamorphose, considérant le monde comme un jardin de changement et de dissolution constants.

    Letters to Eugene
    In Life
    • In Life

      • 97pages
      • 4 heures de lecture
      4,2(5)Évaluer

      Fiction. Translated from the French by Andrew Colpitts. Your life consists of passing time, and time passes around you. Walls chip, and you paint them. Weeds flourish, and you pull them. Throughout IN LIFE Eugène Savitzkaya sifts lyrically through our daily comings and goings, through decay and renovation. Pruning trees, scaling fish, washing windows, ironing and eating are among the myriad tasks surveyed in this book. Even urinating and defecating have their just place in the melee of the day-to-day. IN LIFE is a meditation on the quotidian, the circadian rhythms of life that sustain us and dissolve us. With piercing acuity Savitzkaya pays tribute to those actions that consume the lion's share of our waking hours.

      In Life
    • Letters to Eugene

      • 144pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      4,0(65)Évaluer

      Hervé Guibert's incandescent correspondence with Belgian poet Eugène Savitzkaya.In 1977, Hervé Guibert discovered the first novel written by Eugène Savitzkaya, Mentir, and sent him his La mort propagande, which had just been published. In the following years, they exchanged the books they had written, read each other, appreciated each other. They saw each other rarely, however: one lived in Liège, the other Paris.A turning point occurred in 1982, when Hervé published "Lettre à un frère d'écriture," in which he declared to Eugène, "I love you through your writing." The tone had changed; Hervé, obsessed with his correspondent, wrote him increasingly incandescent letters. 1984 would, however, see the sudden extinguishing of that passion. A deep friendship replaced it, which found itself with new areas to explore: the adventure of publishing L'Autre Journal and at the Villa Medicis, where they were both fellows. These nearly eighty letters, exchanged between 1977 and 1987, form a correspondence that is all the more unique for being the only one whose publication was authorized by Guibert. An intersection of life and writing, self and other, reality and fiction, their release is a renewal of Guibert's oeuvre.

      Letters to Eugene