9781771711906-1771711906-Blaise Cendrars Speaks...

Blaise Cendrars Speaks...

ISBN-13: 9781771711906
ISBN-10: 1771711906
Edition: First Edition
Author: Editor, translator, Blaise CENDRARS, David MacKinnon, Jim Christy
Publication date: 2016
Publisher: Ekstasis Editions
Format: Paperback 214 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781771711906
ISBN-10: 1771711906
Edition: First Edition
Author: Editor, translator, Blaise CENDRARS, David MacKinnon, Jim Christy
Publication date: 2016
Publisher: Ekstasis Editions
Format: Paperback 214 pages

Summary

Blaise Cendrars Speaks... (ISBN-13: 9781771711906 and ISBN-10: 1771711906), written by authors Editor, translator, Blaise CENDRARS, David MacKinnon, Jim Christy, was published by Ekstasis Editions in 2016. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Blaise Cendrars Speaks... (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.82.

Description

Poet, novelist, filmmaker, soldier and war journalist in the two great wars, raconteur, rounder and roustabout, Blaise Cendrars blazed an arc across the star-lit skies of modernity. Originally published by Denoel in 1952, Cendrars Speaks... is a collection of radio interviews and memories of his life and times. From Surrealism to Cubism to the French novel, Cendrars was enormously influential the heir of Rimbaud and the precursor of the beat poets and of Marshall Mcluhan. He was a close collaborator and crony of Léger, Modigliani, Chagall, and venerated by Henry Miller. John Dos Passos immortalized him as the Homer of the Transsiberian . But Cendrars, unlike most of his contemporaries, also marked his era as a participant and front-line witness to the tragic events of the twentieth century. Cendrars own experience and compassion transformed him into a Cassandra-figure who sounded early warnings that modernism was reeling out of control at the expense of our common humanity. It is all here in these remarkable oral memoirs the theft of the Mona Lisa for which Apollinaire was accused, his drinking bouts with Modigliani, the caustic asides on Breton and Picasso, his days in the circus with Chaplin, his friendships with tziganes and train robbers, whaling in the south seas, the pathos of the last days of Apollinaire, and the tragedy of having his works destroyed by the Gestapo and being falsely placed on the infamous Otto List as a Jewish writer. Through these intimate interviews with his good friend Michel Manoll, Blaise Cendrars shares the extraordinary fruits of his legendary life and offers us an inside look into Paris between the wars.
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