Un hommage à Michel Foucault à travers le récit de six années de jeunesse, marquées par l'amitié et des moments d'agitation. La figure du père, ainsi que celle d'autres écrivains comme Samuel Beckett et Alain Robbe-Grillet, est également explorée.
Mathieu Lindon Livres
Mathieu Lindon est un auteur prolifique dont l'œuvre explore le paysage complexe des relations humaines et la profonde quête du sens de l'amour. Sa prose examine avec maestria les facettes intimes et souvent insaisissables de l'émotion et de la communication interpersonnelle, faisant preuve d'un sens aigu du détail et d'une profonde perspicacité psychologique. Par son écriture, Lindon invite les lecteurs à réfléchir sur leurs propres expériences et à s'engager dans un voyage de découverte de soi. Ses contributions littéraires offrent une perspective nuancée sur les complexités du cœur humain.



"Mathieu Lindon met the writer and photographer Hervé Guibert in 1978. The nickname Hervelino marked the start of their friendship, which was cemented a decade later by the years they both spent in Rome. Guibert was a pensionnaire at the Villa Médicis starting in 1987; Lindon became a fellow pensionnaire the next year, and the two would stay in Italy until 1990. These Roman years are at the heart of this autobiographie à deux that alternates between humor and melancholy. Guibert had just learned that he was HIV-positive and would die not long after returning to France and rising to fame with his searing masterpiece To the Friend Who Did Not Save My Life--in which Lindon himself was a character. Hervelino is a book about the difficulty of writing and speaking about someone beloved and revered. In recounting their time in Italy, Lindon contends with the impossibility of writing about Guibert: "To write about Rome is to skip over everything I don't dare to write because it's so hard to make sense of Hervé." Hervelino is a story of a singular friendship, and of the books read and shared by the friend who was loved and lost. As it closes with each inscription Guibert wrote for his friend Mathieu and with Lindon's present-day commentary below it, what remains are shards and fragments of a friendship sealed by illness and death, enshrined by literature and love."-- provided by publisher
An Archive
- 240pages
- 9 heures de lecture
An intimate memoir of growing up inside legendary Parisian publishing house Les Éditions de Minuit. I wanted to tell the story of Les Éditions de Minuit as I saw them as a child. And also to tell the story of my father, Jérôme Lindon, as I saw him and loved him. Are there archives for that? And how to be an archive of the child that I once was? An Archive tells the story of Les Éditions de Minuit, the legendary Parisian publisher of Samuel Beckett, Marguerite Duras, Alain Robbe-Grillet, Claude Simon, Monique Wittig, Gilles Deleuze, Pierre Bourdieu, Marie NDiaye, and so many others. It is the tale of its editor, Jérôme Lindon, who directed the publishing house from 1948 until his death in 2001. It is also the chronicle of growing up in a family of writers who were, to the eyes of a young child, the temple of literature. Looking back on a childhood immersed in books, Mathieu Lindon draws a portrait of his father, narrating his use of power and his avarice, but also his generosity, his enthusiasm for literature and defense of authors, and his commitment to politics—during the German Occupation, through the Algerian War of Independence, and for the Palestinian cause after the Arab-Israeli War of 1967. Opening the archive of his own memory, Lindon gives a moving, ferocious, and often funny account of a defining period of twentieth-century French intellectual history.