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Chien dans la soupe

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  • 321 pages
  • 12 hours of reading

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Enter Latchmer, falling. An innocent abroad in Now York City, he has a lot of problems: an anonymous job with Xerox; a childhood that vaguely troubles him; a hot date tonight with lascivious, one-handed Sarah Hughes. Then fate deals Latchmer a joker in the deck, and all his problems come down, apparently, to this: how to get rid of a dead dog. As Latchmer hits the night-time streets, his burden double-bagged in Hefties, little does he know what an incredible journey awaits him. It is an odyssey through hell and hilarity, guided by one Jean-Claude, a philosophically reckless Hatian cab driver who believes, quite rightly as things turn out, that dogs have a far higher purpose in death than to enrich the soil. As his strange adventure unfolds, Latchmer suffers from a guilty and guileless compulsion to tell curious tales of betrayal. In the end, having sought to bury his shaggy charge in Central Park (all other options having proved unavailing), he finds himself face to face with his own unburied past.

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Chien dans la soupe, Stephen Dobyns, Philippe Rouard

Language
Released
1998
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback),
Book condition
Damaged
Price
€2.35

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Title
Chien dans la soupe
Language
French
Publisher
Gallimard
Released
1998
Format
Paperback
Pages
321
ISBN10
2070405532
ISBN13
9782070405534
Series
Description
Enter Latchmer, falling. An innocent abroad in Now York City, he has a lot of problems: an anonymous job with Xerox; a childhood that vaguely troubles him; a hot date tonight with lascivious, one-handed Sarah Hughes. Then fate deals Latchmer a joker in the deck, and all his problems come down, apparently, to this: how to get rid of a dead dog. As Latchmer hits the night-time streets, his burden double-bagged in Hefties, little does he know what an incredible journey awaits him. It is an odyssey through hell and hilarity, guided by one Jean-Claude, a philosophically reckless Hatian cab driver who believes, quite rightly as things turn out, that dogs have a far higher purpose in death than to enrich the soil. As his strange adventure unfolds, Latchmer suffers from a guilty and guileless compulsion to tell curious tales of betrayal. In the end, having sought to bury his shaggy charge in Central Park (all other options having proved unavailing), he finds himself face to face with his own unburied past.