Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

The Simplon Road

Book rating

More about the book

The Simplon Road is a book about literary obsession. In contrasting essays that delve into childhood and early reading, Ann Pearson and Charles Boyle chronicle their involvement with an author who was notoriously keen to cover his tracks. The figure in which the two meet is the French novelist, travel writer and diplomat Stendhal, aka Henri Beyle, aka Henry Brulard, aka any number of alter egos, pseudonyms and reliably unreliable narrators. Pearson and Boyle write frankly about themselves and their relationship with Stendhal, capturing the paradoxes of his writing: even as we feel we know him intimately, we miss him at every turn. They also highlight the 21st-century anxieties that gnaw away at even this most ebulliently self-reinventing of authors: money, identity, relationships, career and, of course, getting on (in every sense).

Book purchase

The Simplon Road, Ann Pearson, Charles Boyle

Language
Released
2023
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback)
We’ll email you as soon as we track it down.

Payment methods

3.5
Okay
2 Ratings

We’re missing your review here.

Title
The Simplon Road
Language
English
Publisher
CB Editions
Released
2023
Format
Paperback
Pages
76
ISBN10
1739421213
ISBN13
9781739421212
Series
Rating
3.5 out of 5
Description
The Simplon Road is a book about literary obsession. In contrasting essays that delve into childhood and early reading, Ann Pearson and Charles Boyle chronicle their involvement with an author who was notoriously keen to cover his tracks. The figure in which the two meet is the French novelist, travel writer and diplomat Stendhal, aka Henri Beyle, aka Henry Brulard, aka any number of alter egos, pseudonyms and reliably unreliable narrators. Pearson and Boyle write frankly about themselves and their relationship with Stendhal, capturing the paradoxes of his writing: even as we feel we know him intimately, we miss him at every turn. They also highlight the 21st-century anxieties that gnaw away at even this most ebulliently self-reinventing of authors: money, identity, relationships, career and, of course, getting on (in every sense).