Mercier and Camier: Samuel Beckett

Synopsis:

Written over three months in 1946, Mercier and Camier was Beckett’s first post-war work, and his first novel in French. He came to regard it as a practice piece, and set it aside to write his trilogy. Mercier et Camier was finally published in 1970, and in Beckett’s English translation four years later.

The eponymous heroes tramp around a city, then out of it, then back again. They are aimless, but there is something elusive that they should be doing. They arrange meetings, they drink, they argue, they discuss being shot of each other. They are preoccupied by the weather, by provisions, by a raincoat, by an umbrella, by a bicycle ...

‘All of these ingredients in the later work are accompanied here, fleetingly, by those things in Beckett that we know but cannot really name, those things were to occupy so much of the trilogy. Intangible things, traps in the mind, that voice we hear, the stop-start understanding, the ongoing bewilderment, the fear.’ Keith Ridgeway

Tags:

Categorised as:
Fiction
Sub-categories:
General Fiction
Genres & Themes:
Beckett; Modernism
Awards & Prizes:
Nobel Prize in Literature - Winner 1969
Belongs to:
Series: Samuel Beckett
Mercier and Camier book cover

Selected edition:
Paperback
ISBN:
9780571244751
Published:
03.06.2010
No of pages:
128
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