Dora Bruder (Audible Audio Edition) Patrick Modiano Didier Sandre Gallimard Books
Download As PDF : Dora Bruder (Audible Audio Edition) Patrick Modiano Didier Sandre Gallimard Books
Dans une vieille édition de Paris-Soir, celle du 31 décembre 1941, le narrateur lit, par hasard, une petite annonce dans la rubrique "D'hier à aujourd'hui". On y recherche une fugueuse âgée de quinze ans, Dora Bruder. Hier, c'est le temps du Paris occupé, de l'étoile jaune, des rafles et des internements ; aujourd'hui, ce sont les dernières années du XXe siècle, quand ce passé tragique taraude les vivants.
Entre le 25 février 1926, jour de naissance de Dora, et le 13 août 1942, date de son internement au camp de Drancy, l'écrivain enquêteur recherche les étincelles de vie qui combattent l'ensevelissement par l'oubli, et les transmet à l'auditeur avec justesse et émotion.
Dora Bruder (Audible Audio Edition) Patrick Modiano Didier Sandre Gallimard Books
Within the large oeuvre of Patrick Modiano, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2014, "Dora Bruder" stands out in having a historical figure as its protagonist. Dora, after whom a passageway in the 18th arrondissement of Paris was recently named, was born in the capital, the sole child of Jewish emigres. When 15 years old in late 1941, her family reported her missing from her Catholic boarding school, and it is possible that she was but a few years older when her life ended during the war years of Nazi occupation. Dora was rounded up in the deportation of French Jews and sent to Auschwitz. But then the canvas on which the outlines of Dora's life was painted goes blank."Dora Bruder" is arguably Modiano's most haunting, unforgettable, and beautifully written book. And this is notable because few people who had known Dora still lived in 1988 when the author--his interest piqued by a December 1941 missing persons notice in "Paris-Soir"-- began his research. Intimate details of the young Jewish girl's days and pleasures, snippets of conversation, and even records penned by her hand were all totally lacking. Yet Modiano makes me weep for the loss of Dora.
Modiano achieved this thanks to his skill for reading the neighborhoods and buildings of the Paris that Dora knew and his tenacity in unearthing documentary information preserved over decades by the obsessively bureaucratic security services of France. That the reader is able to join Modiano in walking in Dora's shoes results from his having traced the exact streets and metro lines she likely used. American readers reviewing Modiano's books are sometimes puzzled and dismayed by of the amount of time devoted to naming the capital city's streets and providing precise locations for even the most trivial of events. In this case, however, the author's attention to such details reveals how much one can glean by revisiting the physical environments in which a person lived.
A further sense of reality regarding Dora's life is imparted by text that describes the atmosphere, and even the weather, of Paris as Dora would have known it. Take, for example, a paragraph that runs from page 73 to 74. "One way not to lose all touch with Dora Bruder over this period would be to report on the changes in the weather. The first snow fell on 4 November 1941. Winter got off to a cold start on 22 December. On 29 December, the temperature dropped still further, and windowpanes were covered with a thin coating of ice. From 13 January inwards, the cold became Siberian." It was at this time that Dora had run away from school.
Interleaved with writing about Dora Bruder, Modiano provides information about his relationship with a distant father, a Jew who escaped Nazi deportation and survived the occupation as a black marketer. Further material is offered documenting Modiano's own experiences as a young man and, as the author is wont to do, the chronological sequencing of this information follows a scrambled sequence. For those new to Modiano's work, this pattern is sometimes confusing, but for those of us now well along reading the author, it offers a charm all its own.
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Dora Bruder (Audible Audio Edition) Patrick Modiano Didier Sandre Gallimard Books Reviews
I really wanted to quote the final paragraph of Modiano's novel, which is infinitely more moving in its simplicity than anything that comes before. But I will desist, and leave it for the reader to discover -- not because it gives away secrets, but because it does the opposite, preserving a secret for all time. It is the one gift he can offer to the tragic subject of his writing, a teenage Jewish girl living in Paris at the time of the German Occupation.
So failing that, let me come upon it obliquely, as Modiano himself does. Near the beginning of his book, the author recalls visiting the hospital of the Salpêtrière in search of his ailing father, whom he had not seen for many years
"I remember having wandered for hours through the immensity of this vast hospital, looking for him. I went into ancient buildings, passed through wards lined with beds, and questioned nurses who gave me contradictory information. I ended almost doubting my father's very existence as I walked back and forth in front of that majestic church and those unreal buildings, unchanged since the 18th century. They made me think of Manon Lescaut and the time when they served as a prison for prostitutes, under the sinister name of General Hospital, before they were deported to Louisiana. I must have pounded those paved courtyards until dusk. I never saw my father again." [translation mine]
This is paragraph has nothing to do with Modiano's main subject, which is to trace the last months of this girl before her eventual capture. And yet it has everything to do with his motivation and method. It could be said that his entire oeuvre has to do with the search for his father and his failure to find him -- or at least to understand how he could have survived the Occupation as a Jew, unless as a black-marketeer and collaborator with the Germans. His method of inserting himself into the settings of his story, his precise accumulation of detail, his command of the parallels with history and literature, make him into an archaeologist of shame, very much in the manner of WG Sebald, though with documents in place of photographs. The one exception is the winter scene on the cover which sums up the desolate atmosphere of the book in a single shot.*
Like his Prix Goncourt novel, RUE DES BOUTIQUES OBSCURES, but unlike his recently translated trilogy SUSPENDED SENTENCES, I read this in French, and feel it was absolutely essential to do so. Not for Modiano's style, which is direct rather than literary in tone, but the number of original documents he uncovers, whose untranslatable bureaucratic language treats the management of horror as a day's normal business. Modiano's trigger is a mention in a 1941 newspaper that a 15-year-old schoolgirl named Dora Bruder has disappeared. The author knows the area in which her family lived, and revisits the once-familiar streets to soak in the atmosphere. I read with Google Maps zoomed in to various areas of Paris, walking vicariously through the unfamiliar quarters, imagining how they must have felt in 1941. What intrigues him is that Dora's disappearance does not coincide with the round-ups of French Jews, which did not begin until later the following year. So why did she vanish?
Indefatigably, he looks through records, searching for information. And remarkably, he finds a lot. Unlike the other four Modiano books I have read, which work obliquely by mystery and suggestion, this one is almost full-frontal. There is no question what ultimately happened to Dora Bruder, and the details make painful reading. Fact after fact after fact, not revealed in order, but squeezing Dora's life between them as in a slowly closing trap. Soon, there are no secrets left. Except one -- and that is the stroke of poetry that turns this painstaking history into a work of art.
[*I will give more information on this and a couple of other matters in the comments.]
Within the large oeuvre of Patrick Modiano, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2014, "Dora Bruder" stands out in having a historical figure as its protagonist. Dora, after whom a passageway in the 18th arrondissement of Paris was recently named, was born in the capital, the sole child of Jewish emigres. When 15 years old in late 1941, her family reported her missing from her Catholic boarding school, and it is possible that she was but a few years older when her life ended during the war years of Nazi occupation. Dora was rounded up in the deportation of French Jews and sent to Auschwitz. But then the canvas on which the outlines of Dora's life was painted goes blank.
"Dora Bruder" is arguably Modiano's most haunting, unforgettable, and beautifully written book. And this is notable because few people who had known Dora still lived in 1988 when the author--his interest piqued by a December 1941 missing persons notice in "Paris-Soir"-- began his research. Intimate details of the young Jewish girl's days and pleasures, snippets of conversation, and even records penned by her hand were all totally lacking. Yet Modiano makes me weep for the loss of Dora.
Modiano achieved this thanks to his skill for reading the neighborhoods and buildings of the Paris that Dora knew and his tenacity in unearthing documentary information preserved over decades by the obsessively bureaucratic security services of France. That the reader is able to join Modiano in walking in Dora's shoes results from his having traced the exact streets and metro lines she likely used. American readers reviewing Modiano's books are sometimes puzzled and dismayed by of the amount of time devoted to naming the capital city's streets and providing precise locations for even the most trivial of events. In this case, however, the author's attention to such details reveals how much one can glean by revisiting the physical environments in which a person lived.
A further sense of reality regarding Dora's life is imparted by text that describes the atmosphere, and even the weather, of Paris as Dora would have known it. Take, for example, a paragraph that runs from page 73 to 74. "One way not to lose all touch with Dora Bruder over this period would be to report on the changes in the weather. The first snow fell on 4 November 1941. Winter got off to a cold start on 22 December. On 29 December, the temperature dropped still further, and windowpanes were covered with a thin coating of ice. From 13 January inwards, the cold became Siberian." It was at this time that Dora had run away from school.
Interleaved with writing about Dora Bruder, Modiano provides information about his relationship with a distant father, a Jew who escaped Nazi deportation and survived the occupation as a black marketer. Further material is offered documenting Modiano's own experiences as a young man and, as the author is wont to do, the chronological sequencing of this information follows a scrambled sequence. For those new to Modiano's work, this pattern is sometimes confusing, but for those of us now well along reading the author, it offers a charm all its own.
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