Par une brumeuse matinée de 1934, Elvira Western quitte son confort londonien et son mari pour rejoindre à Paris son jeune amant, Oliver Fenton, un étudiant anglais exalté. Mais, rapidement, l'escapade se transforme en journées languides dans les cafés de Saint-Germain-des-Prés en compagnie de journalistes débauchés, de bourgeois extravagants et d'une danseuse de cabaret désargentée. De flûtes de champagne en apéritifs, de déconvenues amoureuses en rencontres nocturnes surréelles, Elvira doute de son choix, jusqu'à regretter sa vie avec Paul, son époux, qui tente de la reconquérir. Ce drame romantique avant-gardiste dépeint, dans le Paris fantasmagorique et électrique de l'entre-deux-guerres, les passions paradoxales d'une femme trop intelligente, espiègle et inconstante pour aimer les hommes.
Christina Stead Ordre des livres
Christina Stead était une auteure australienne considérée comme l'une des maîtres romancières du XXe siècle. Elle a passé une grande partie de sa vie d'écrivain à l'étranger, ses diverses résidences servant souvent de toile de fond à ses romans. Ses œuvres explorent les complexités des relations humaines et de la psychologie des personnages avec une perspicacité aiguë et une voix distinctive. Stead est célébrée pour ses observations pointues et sa capacité à créer des personnages profondément humains, bien que parfois troublants, s'assurant ainsi une place parmi les voix littéraires marquantes de son époque.




- 2018
- 2004
Letty Fox
- 508pages
- 18 heures de lecture
You can't help liking Letty Fox. She is the eponymous hero of this novel, and what a big, energetic, sprawling novel it is. Letty Fox, with brio and relish, describes her picaresque adventures in the New York and London of the 1930s and 1940s. She is surrounded by a family notable for its size, eccentricity and marital irregularities. Letty herself has many affairs but finds marriage elusive. Bizarre, satirical and imaginative, first published in 1947, this powerful portrayal of a woman who might have been independent but chose otherwise stands as one of Christina Stead's most impressive works. Christina Stead is much more than the author of "The Man Who Loved Children." To remind readers forcefully of this, Faber Finds is reissuing nine of her works: "The Beauties and Furies," "For Love Alone," "House of All Nations," "Letty Fox: Her Luck," "A Little Tea, A Little Chat," "Miss Herbert," "The People with Dogs," "The Puzzleheaded Girl" and "The Salzburg Tales."
- 1982
Miss Herbert (the Suburban Wife)
- 308pages
- 11 heures de lecture
Eleanor Herbert Brent is a beautiful English woman who believes in respectability and nurtures a desire to be a wife and mother in the 'dear old fashioned way'. But sexuality too forms her personality, and as a young graduate on the loose in London she explores it with every man she meets. She experiences everything: a restless, promiscuous youth, a wholesome suburban marriage, life on the fringes of literary London. Only one thing remains beyond her reach: the experience of real love; this and this only could transform Miss Herbert into the passionate woman she really is.
- 1980
The Man Who Loved Children
- 304pages
- 11 heures de lecture
With an Introduction by Randall Jarrell. Sam and Henny Pollit have too many children, too little money, and too much loathing for each other. As Sam uses the children's adoration to feed his own voracious ego, Henny watches in bleak despair, knowing the bitter reality that lies just below his mad visions. A chilling novel of family life, the relations between parents and children, husbands and wives, The Man Who Loved Children, is acknowledged as a contemporary classic.