Heartsnatcher
First edition | |
Author | Boris Vian |
---|---|
Original title | L'Arrache-cœur |
Translator | Stanley Chapman |
Language | French |
Publisher | Éditions Vrille |
Publication date | 1953 |
Publication place | France |
Published in English | 1968 |
Pages | 234 |
Heartsnatcher (French: L'Arrache-cœur) is a 1953 novel by the French writer Boris Vian. It tells the story of a psychoanalyst who is newly arrived in a very superstitious village where absurd events occur. The heartsnatcher of the title of this book was first seen in an earlier Vian novel Froth on the daydream. It is a macabre invention, an implement with which that traditional seat of our emotions can be gorily extracted. One victim of it is a philosopher named Jean-Sol Partre.[1]
Reception
The book was reviewed in Publishers Weekly in 2003: "Vian's sharp, playful humor makes for an entertaining read, although there are extended flat stretches. While the allegorical conceits may be something of an acquired taste, Vian's prose is surprisingly accessible, and his fascinating take on the strange logic of human cruelty and inconsistency makes this a worthwhile read."[2]
Adaptation
- film
See also
- 1953 in literature
- 20th-century French literature
References
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- I Spit on Your Graves (1946)
- Vercoquin and the Plankton (1946)
- Froth on the Daydream (1947)
- The Dead All Have the Same Skin (1947)
- Autumn in Peking (1947)
- The Red Grass (1950)
- Heartsnatcher (1953)
- Turmoil in the Swaths (1966)
- Je voudrais pas crever (1962)
- "Le Déserteur" (1954)
- "Fais-moi mal, Johnny" (1955)
- 15 chansons d'avant le déluge, suite et fin (1976 album)
- L'écume des jours (1986 opera)
- Mood Indigo (2013 film)
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