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Ivory Pearl
Ivory Pearl | Jean-Patrick Manchette
2 posts
"Set in Cuba's Sierra Maestra in the 1950s, in the days leading up to the Revolution--Manchette's unfinished masterpiece with a fearless female protagonist. Four of the ten titles in Jean-Patrick Manchette's celebrated 1970s cycle of hard-boiled novels, which the author originally dubbed neo-polars, or "neo-crime novels," have now appeared in English translation. Manchette is beginning to have a significant following among English-language readers, as witness chatter in cyberspace, favorable reviews, increasing sales, and the fact that the latest entrant, The Mad and the Bad (New York Review Books), won the 2014 French-American Foundation Translation Prize for Donald Nicholson-Smith. Ivory Pearl, aka Princesse du sang, published posthumously -and unfinished- in 1996, is considered by many French critics to be Manchette's masterpiece. In the early 1980s Manchette abandoned his attempt to "press the roman noir into the service of the social revolution" and turned his pen to other things. By the end of that decade, however, he resolved to start anew, though now working on a broader, "geopolitical" canvas. Inspiration came now less from Hammett's Red Harvest than from John Le Carre and, especially, from the works of Ross Thomas that Manchette had been translating. Sadly, Manchette's early death from cancer in 1995 put an end to this grand project. What remains, however, is Ivory Pearl, set mainly in Cuba's Sierra Maestra in the 1950s. The book will not disappoint those who admire Manchette's mastery of suspense and penchant for dauntless feminine protagonists"--
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Liz_M
Ivory Pearl | Jean-Patrick Manchette
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August's #TitlesandTunes took some thought. The somewhat absurd “Pulling Mussels (from the shell)“ with it's beach holiday images seemed a nice counterpoint to the (probably violent) noir story of a war orphan turned photojournalist (with the help of a rich man) taking a break in Cuba. In 1956.

I've substituted the actual Shakespeare quote above for #TheWorldIsMyOyster. 😊

@Cinfhen @BarbaraBB

vivastory I've loved both of the Manchette books that I've read 9mo
BarbaraBB Such smart choices! I didn‘t expect less from you 😀💛 9mo
Cinfhen Squeeze!!!!! I forgot how MUCH I 💙this song!!!!! Awesome pairing 9mo
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batsy Nice picks! I've had my eye on that book. 9mo
Liz_M @vivastory I read my first Manchette -The Mad and the Bad - this summer and it was a fun trip! 9mo
Liz_M @BarbaraBB Why thank you, thank you very much. 9mo
Liz_M @Cinfhen 😁 How could I resist a song about shellfish and a book including a pearl? 9mo
Liz_M @batsy It was finished by someone else after his death, so we'll see.... 9mo
CarolynM Brilliant song choice👏 9mo
Billypar I'm a little late to looking through these posts but this song popped in my head too - great choice. 9mo
Liz_M @CarolynM @Billypar Thanks! 😁 9mo
24 likes11 comments
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Liz_M
Ivory Pearl | Jean-Patrick Manchette
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The five books I ordered from the #nyrb sale arrived today. 😔 Ivory Pearl where are you??? 😢

vivastory I have Sunflower. The others sound fantastic!! 5y
BarbaraBB What kind of Proust is that? Not a part of In Search of Lost Times right? 5y
Liz_M @BarbaraBB One is Proust's housekeeper's reminiscences about Proust. 5y
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Liz_M @BarbaraBB The other is a series of lectures the author gave to inmates while a prisoner of war in a Soviet camp 5y
BarbaraBB Both seem so interesting! (edited) 5y
Suet624 Wow. Lost Time sounds fascinating. 5y
Liz_M @jenniferp two more Proust books for your collection? (edited) 5y
BarbaraBB Do you have a Proust collection, @JenniferP ? I have still not finished our original buddy read, but I AM still reading 5y
JenniferP @Liz_M @BarbaraBB I own the Albaret book but haven‘t read it yet. I hadn‘t heard of the other but will likely pick it up at some point. Thanks! 5y
17 likes9 comments