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A Void
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A Void by Georges Perec
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Anton Vowl disappears and his friends start looking for him, tracing his path to the Azincourt estate, where a story unfolds of family secrets and blood feuds. It’s full of subplots and digressions that baffle and astound the reader, but ultimately it all makes a kind of sense which is perhaps the most amazing thing of all.
I thought it was a work of crazy genius. I preferred the setup in Life: A User's Manual, but this was just as original and impressive as a technical and imaginative work.
This change in tone indicates something more serious about the terror of what happens when what we are used to is destroyed. I looked up if Perec intended anything specific in this metaphor, and found out it he was really writing about losing his father to the war, and his mother to the holocaust. In French, you cannot say Pere (father), mere (mother), family (famille) or his name (Georges Perec) without the E. He has to avoid these topics to cope or it goes into the horrifying end of the mystery, and he himself is rendered ‘ a void’ of a person because of this loss of the things most fundamental.
I thought this was brilliant, but the title actually works better in the translated English. The French “La Disparition” (The disappearance) works as well.
I gave it 5 stars.