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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A rediscovered classic from the author of For Two Thousand Years, this remarkable novel presents nuanced snapshots of love in the early twentieth century.
Stefan Valeriu, a young man from Romania who has just completed his medical studies in Paris, spends his vacation in the Alps, where he quickly becomes entangled with three different women. We follow Stefan after his return to Paris as he reflects on the women in his life, at times playing the lover, and at others observing shrewdly from the periphery.
Women's four interlinked stories offer moving, strikingly modern portraits of romantic relationships in all their complexity, from unrequited loves and passionate affairs to tepid marriages of convenience. In the same eloquent style that would characterize his later, more political writings, Mihail Sebastian explores longing, otherness, empathy, and regret.
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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2019
      A young man's romantic and sexual exploits are examined from various angles in this novel first published in 1933.In the first section of Sebastian's (For Two Thousand Years, 2017) second novel to appear in English, a young Romanian medical student arrives at a guesthouse in the Alps. He has just completed his exams in Paris and has come to take a rest. Instead, he becomes involved with three different women at the guesthouse--romantically and sexually--and, all in all, there's little rest to be had. His name is Stefan Valeriu. In the novel's second section, time shifts forward and perspective shifts sideways. Valeriu is now narrating--not his own exploits, this time, but the sad situation of a girl he once knew, with "an impoverished, joyless life." The novel shifts twice more after this: First there is a letter to Valeriu from a woman to whom he has apparently proclaimed his love; and, last of all, Valeriu returns to the first person to describe an earlier affair with a former acrobat. Sections are titled after the women they describe: Émilie, Maria, Arabela, and so on. But even though the novel takes as its main subject the romantic entanglements of its main character, there is something else, too, seething beneath this current. The novel was written in the years between the two world wars, and though no explicit reference to politics or history is ever made, the shadows of the wars are felt quite forcefully in each discrete section. Sebastian himself was a Jew from Romania who wrote openly about his experiences. Eventually, his friends abandoned him. He survived the Second World War only to die in a freak accident in 1945. Sebastian's other, perhaps stronger, work deals more directly with the legacy of the wars, but this novel is no throwaway, either: It's an edgy account of sexuality, desire, and the strictures of contemporary relationships.Not quite as dynamic as Sebastian's more explicitly political work, the novel is still a compelling portrait of desire in its many convoluted manifestations.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 11, 2019
      This skeletal novel in stories from Sebastian (For Two Thousand Years), originally published in 1933, comprises four pieces that follow the sensual and romantic adventures of Stefan Valeriu. Stefan, a young Romanian man recently out of medical school, is introduced in “Renée, Marthe, and Odette,
      ” in which Stefan vacations alone at a resort in the French Alps. There, he meets Renée Rey, the lustful wife of a Tunisian plantation owner; Marthe Bonneau, an elegant older woman on vacation with her son; and Odette Mignon, a quick-witted 18-year-old recent high school graduate who’s also on vacation alone. Stefan falls in love with each, and each leaves him and the resort behind for their normal lives. Sebastian’s observations of the complex physical and emotional details of romantic intrigue are perceptive
      and affectionate: “They don’t need to struggle to find each other in the dark, don’t lose each other, don’t speak: the harmony is that of two stalks, growing, entwined.” Even so, the work suffers from inconsistency, and the final three tales, all concerning love affairs in Paris, read like sketches in comparison to the opening story. Stefan, meanwhile, remains frustratingly elusive and mysterious beyond his desire for a series of women. Despite the unpolished feel, these concise stories, when at their best, showcase Sebastian’s a brilliant eye for emotional detail.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2019
      A young man's romantic and sexual exploits are examined from various angles in this novel first published in 1933.In the first section of Sebastian's (For Two Thousand Years, 2017) second novel to appear in English, a young Romanian medical student arrives at a guesthouse in the Alps. He has just completed his exams in Paris and has come to take a rest. Instead, he becomes involved with three different women at the guesthouse--romantically and sexually--and, all in all, there's little rest to be had. His name is Stefan Valeriu. In the novel's second section, time shifts forward and perspective shifts sideways. Valeriu is now narrating--not his own exploits, this time, but the sad situation of a girl he once knew, with "an impoverished, joyless life." The novel shifts twice more after this: First there is a letter to Valeriu from a woman to whom he has apparently proclaimed his love; and, last of all, Valeriu returns to the first person to describe an earlier affair with a former acrobat. Sections are titled after the women they describe: �milie, Maria, Arabela, and so on. But even though the novel takes as its main subject the romantic entanglements of its main character, there is something else, too, seething beneath this current. The novel was written in the years between the two world wars, and though no explicit reference to politics or history is ever made, the shadows of the wars are felt quite forcefully in each discrete section. Sebastian himself was a Jew from Romania who wrote openly about his experiences. Eventually, his friends abandoned him. He survived the Second World War only to die in a freak accident in 1945. Sebastian's other, perhaps stronger, work deals more directly with the legacy of the wars, but this novel is no throwaway, either: It's an edgy account of sexuality, desire, and the strictures of contemporary relationships.Not quite as dynamic as Sebastian's more explicitly political work, the novel is still a compelling portrait of desire in its many convoluted manifestations.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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