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Guignol's Band


Guignol's Band


Guignol's Band is a 1944 novel by the French writer Louis-Ferdinand Céline. Set in the mid 1910s, the narrative revolves around Ferdinand, an invalided French World War I veteran who lives in exile in London, and follows his small businesses and interacting with prostitutes. It was followed by a sequel, London Bridge: Guignol's Band II, published posthumously in 1964.

Writing process

Louis-Ferdinand Céline spent a number of months in London after an injury in World War I, and the novel bears some autobiographical elements from that time. The French literature scholar Merlin Thomas wrote in his biography on Céline: "In the chronology of Céline's life as seen through the novels, Guignol's Band should be a massive insert in Voyage, coming immediately before the African section of that work."

Publication

The novel was first published by Éditions Denoël in April 1944 and received very little attention; Céline was highly unpopular at the time, due to his outspoken anti-Semitic stance in combination with the ongoing World War II. It was republished by Éditions Gallimard in 1952, and again did not receive much notice. In 1954 it was published in English.

See also

  • 1944 in literature
  • 20th-century French literature

References

Notes
Bibliography
  • Thomas, Merlin (1979). Louis-Ferdinand Céline. New York City: New Directions Publishing. pp. 184–185. ISBN 0-8112-0754-4.



Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Guignol's Band by Wikipedia (Historical)