Honeymoon

Honeymoon

by Patrick Modiano

Narrated by Bronson Pinchot

Unabridged — 3 hours, 28 minutes

Honeymoon

Honeymoon

by Patrick Modiano

Narrated by Bronson Pinchot

Unabridged — 3 hours, 28 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$12.97
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)
$13.95 Save 7% Current price is $12.97, Original price is $13.95. You Save 7%.

Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers


Overview

Jean B. is submerged in a world where night and day, past and present have no demarcations. Having spent his entire adult life making documentary movies about lost explorers, Jean suddenly decides to abandon his wife and career and takes what seems to be a journey to nowhere. He spends his solitary days recounting or imagining the lives of Ingrid and Rigaud, a refugee couple he met more than twenty years ago. Little by little, their story takes on more reality than Jean's existence, as his excavation of the past slowly becomes an all-encompassing obsession.

In Honeymoon, Patrick Modiano constructs an existential tale of suspense, longing, and of the past's hold over a shifting, ambiguous present. Barbara Wright's translation remains true to Modiano's simple, melodious prose of a born storyteller.


Editorial Reviews

Library Journal

$19.95. F A winner of France's prestigious Prix Goncourt, Modiano is the author of 17 novels as well as the screenplay for Louis Malle's noteworthy film, Lacombe Lucien. In this slight but probing novel, a middle-aged man decides to take a ``honeymoon.'' Scheduled to fly to Brazil on a job, documentary filmmaker Jean B. instead slips away to Milan and then returns to a Parisian suburb. There he attempts to trace the life and death (by suicide) of a woman named Ingrid, whom he met while hitchhiking to Saint-Tropez. World War II is raging, and Ingrid, who is traveling with her husband, clearly has something to hide. Ingrid's mystery is not rewardingly played out, but Modiano is a wonderfully evocative writer--there's a nice touch of menace throughout, and the cool, collected writing feels like a salve. For literary collections.-- Barbara Hoffert, ``Library Journal''

From the Publisher

Praise for Honeymoon

“A beautiful example of Modiano’s fluid storytelling.”—Booklist

“Haunting, ambiguous, and more universal than one might expect… Honeymoon is shaped by the imperfections and subjectivity of knowledge, and by WWII, the black hole of French memory.”—Publishers Weekly

“Turning to invention to get at deeper realities of experience is fiction’s righteous mission, and Honeymoon performs it beautifully. We all hold the keys to mysteries of our own making, Modiano tells us. If only we knew where we hid them.”—New Yorker

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2015-04-22
Brooding, philosophically rich novel by Modiano (Missing Person, 2014, etc.), recipient of the 2014 Nobel Prize in literature. Jean B. is a filmmaker—a documentary filmmaker, more precisely, and one constantly on the go from continent to continent and culture to culture: "I was just back from Oceania," he recalls, "and I was to leave for Rio de Janeiro a few days later." This tour finds him on a short layover in Milan while traveling to Paris by train—and everyone knows that you don't go to Milan in August, when everyone is gone or hiding from the heat. Apparently the heat is too much, or something is too much in any event, for another traveler, Ingrid Theysen, who, Jean learns, killed herself a couple of days earlier after drinking just the same drink he has now ordered. It's not the drink's fault but instead the weight of the whole oppressive 20th century: the war, the occupation, the whole bit. The thing is, Jean knew Ingrid two decades earlier, when she'd brightly said, "We'll pretend to be dead." Why should Ingrid want to do so? What secret did she hold—and how about Rigaud, the fellow whom she'd run off with during the war, leaving it to her poor parents to place advertisements begging for information about their missing daughter? Modiano is in high mystery mode as Jean sets out to retrace Ingrid's steps past "groups of German soldiers and French policemen," hugging the walls while trying to avoid being seen. And why? Well, there's the nub, and Modiano takes his time solving the puzzle and then not filling in every blank—not least the one that might tell us why Jean should be interested in the first place. Along the way, he coolly evokes the black-and-white grittiness of France in the early 1960s, when so many were trying to forget the events of 20 years before, and leaves much of the rest to the reader's imagination. Trademark Modiano, brittle and elegant, with more questions than answers.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169906790
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 03/01/2016
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews