Wednesday, December 8, 2010

"Vaucluse--the small regional department of southern France--our new home and the new tempest."


 


From page 24 of the book:  "...We turned into the Place du Tambor d'Arcole, a quiet but busy triangle with small shops, a law office, two opposing rows of parked automobiles, a butcher, and several restaurants which were waiting to test our pallets."
                                                         
[The drummer boy served in Napoleon's northern Italy campaign of 1796.  While the Austrians and Italians battled the French for control of the Arcole Bridge, the drummer boy beat his drum so furiously that the Austrians thought it was artillery fire and retreated so that the French could capture the bridge and win the battle.]

Page 6 "...she hadn't read Scott Fitzgerald or Julian Green or"







F. Scott Fitzgerald
American author of novels and short stories, whose works are the paradigm writings of the Jazz Age, a term he coined himself. He is widely regarded as one of the twentieth century's greatest writers. Fitzgerald is considered a member of the "Lost Generation" of the 1920s. He finished four novels, This Side of Paradise, The Beautiful and Damned, Tender Is the Night and the celebrated classic, The Great Gatsby.

Julian Green
French born American author of several novels including Léviathan and Each in His Own Darkness. He wrote primarily in French, but was not a French citizen.  Julien Green's fame rests principally not on his novels, but on his journals, published in ten volumes, and spanning the years 1926-1976. These avidly-read and well-known volumes provide a chronicle of his literary and religious life, and a unique window on the artistic and literary scene in Paris over a span of half a century. Green's style, austere and employing to great effect the "passé simple", a literary tense nearly abandoned by many of his French contemporaries, found favor with the Académie française, a fact mentioned in his election to that august body. Green resigned from the Académie shortly before his death, citing his American heritage and loyalties.


James Baldwin:  American novelist, writer, playwright, poet, essayist and civil rights activist.
Most of Baldwin's work deals with racial and sexual issues in the mid-20th century in the United States. His novels are notable for the personal way in which they explore questions of identity as well as the way in which they mine complex social and psychological pressures related to being black and homosexual well before the social, cultural or political equality of these groups was improved.

Page 247 "...rasteurs...leaped out of the way of the charging beasts"


From page 247 of the book:  "...We finished our beer and walked along the street toward the center of activity in our quarter. Shanzenbach was able to find us and brought us all to an improvised stadium, complete with bleachers, in which a bull fight had been set up and was currently in progress. We sat in the bleachers, watching as young men, dressed in white, made aggravating pantomimes at two bulls, whose horns had been capped with metal and decorated with a string of flowers. The object was to comb off as many of the flowers as possible without getting butted by the bulls. It was all done in good spirits; no one would hurt the bulls, and the men, or rasteurs as they were called, invariably leaped out of the way of the charging beasts, jumping over the wooden fence and in front of the spectators to avoid injury. Shanzenbach especially liked this form of entertainment, since it was something he could bet on."

Page 64 "And we'll have two bottles of the Domaine Tempier, added Ebert."

[In the late 1980s, when I first discovered this wine, it was selling for between $10 and $12 a bottle; now of course it's probably well out of my range.]

Page 7 "offering a house to rent in Cadenet, Vaucluse,"


[This first post card, which I received from my boss, Doris "Shammy" Shamleffer, when I worked for New York Friends Group, Inc., from 1977-1982, suggested to me the temperament of the place in which my characters would reside.  And you can see on the right half of the picture, there is a brown suit hanging.]

From page 7 of the book:  "...Owen spotted a man's brown suit hanging from a second-story drainpipe and remarked how people's indifference was the same throughout the world."

And then:

From page 123 of the book:  "...green countryside, searching for nothing in particular under that bright Sunday heat, when suddenly I spotted the brown suit Revenant had pointed out hanging from a window. Owen noticed it, too.   "It's like the Yeats poem," he said. "'Fifteen apparitions have I seen; the worst a coat upon a coat hanger.'"  "What do we do with that?" I asked. "It remains to be seen," he said tiredly."
[This second postcard, which Shammy also sent me, confirmed that this was the place.  And you can see the statue of the drummer boy smack dab in the middle.]