Pedigree

Pedigree - New York Review Books Classics

Paperback (28 Sep 2010)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Pedigree is Georges Simenon's longest, most unlikely, and most adventurous novel, the book that is increasingly seen to lie at the heart of his outsize achievement as a chronicler of modern self and society. In the early 1940s, Simenon began work on a memoir of his Belgian childhood. He showed the initial pages to André Gide, who urged him to turn them into a novel. The result was, Simenon later quipped, a book in which everything is true but nothing is accurate. Spanning the years from the beginning of the century, with its political instability and terrorist threats, to the end of the First World War in 1918, Pedigree is an epic of everyday existence in all its messy unfinished intensity and density, a story about the coming-of-age of a precocious and curious
boy and the coming to be of the modern world.

Book information

ISBN: 9781590173510
Publisher: New York Review Books
Imprint: New York Review Books
Pub date:
DEWEY: 843.912
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 543
Weight: 576g
Height: 203mm
Width: 135mm
Spine width: 31mm