The Girl from the Chartreuse

The Girl from the Chartreuse

by Ina Rilke (Translator), Pierre Péju (Author)

Synopsis

The owner of the bookshop THE VERB TO BE, is a red-haired giant imprisoned in an enormous body and his solitude. One wet afternoon, driving a vanload of new and second-hand books, EtienneVollard knocks down and seriously injures a little girl, Eva. In the hospital, he meets Eva's mother, Therese, a struggling single parent who lacks maternal instincts and whose dream is to be faraway, alone. Both are haunted by guilt: Therese because of her lateness in collecting her daughter, and Vollard because he did not manage to stop his car on time (even if he knows that he could not have avoided -va: indeed she seemed to throw herself in front of the car). Vollard visits Eva regularly while she is in a coma and reads books to her, while Therese spaces her visits out. When Eva eventually wakes up, she has become mute and is terribly weakened. A few weeks after Eva has been sent to a rehabilitation centre in the Massif de la Chartreuse, Therese gets a job faraway and asks Vollard to visit her daughter on her behalf. Soon, Vollard enjoys their walks in the mountain, where he tells her stories and poems he has memorized and tries to break her out of her mute, impassive shell. However, nothing seems to help La Petite Chartreuse - Vollard calls Eva that way in reference to the monastic order of the Chartreux - to enjoy life again. She becomes weaker everyday to such a point that Vollard decides to find Therese and to take her back to her daughter before it is too late . . .

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 176
Edition: New
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 04 May 2006

ISBN 10: 0099468697
ISBN 13: 9780099468691
Book Overview: An outstanding prize-winning, best-selling French novel. 'This is an extremely beautiful book of unlikely collisions, moments of great tenderness, and awkward truth. I enjoyed it very much' - Audrey Niffenegger, author of The Time Traveller's Wife.

Media Reviews
'Peju's real subject is literature itself...Peju treads a fine line between pretension and profundity, layering his text with many others from the Gospels to Becket and Borges, but his own words, weighed against theirs, are rarely found wanting.' * Independent on Sunday *
Author Bio
PIERRE PEJU, writer, philosopher and director of studies at the International College of Philosophy, has written four books. The Girl from the Chartreuse, his latest one, met with an exceptional critical and commercial success in France.