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  • Published: 15 March 2009
  • ISBN: 9781590173046
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $39.99

Chaos and Night

  • Henry de Montherlant



Don Celestino is old and bitter and afraid, an impossible man. An anarchist who has been in exile from his native Spain for more than twenty years, he lives with his daughter in Paris, but in his mind he is still fighting the Spanish Civil War. He fulminates against the daily papers; he brags about his past exploits. He has become bigoted, self-important, and obsessed; a bully to his fellow exiles and a tyrant to his daughter, Pascualita.

Then a family member dies in Madrid and there is an inheritance to sort out. Pascualita wants to go to Spain, which is supposedly opening up in response to the 1960s, and Don Celestino feels he has no choice but to follow. He is full of dread and desire, foreseeing a heroic last confrontation with his enemies, but what he encounters instead is a new commercialized Spain that has no time for the past, much less for him. Or so it seems. Because the last act of Don Celestino’s dizzying personal drama will prove that though “there is nothing serious . . . , there is tragedy.”

An astonishing modern take on Don Quixote, Chaos and Night untangles the ties between politics and paranoia, self-loathing and self-pity, rage and remorse. It is the darkly funny final flowering of the art of Henry de Montherlant, a solitary and scarifying modern master whose work, admired by Graham Greene and Albert Camus, is sure to appeal to contemporary readers of Thomas Bernhard and Roberto Bolaño.

  • Published: 15 March 2009
  • ISBN: 9781590173046
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $39.99

Praise for Chaos and Night

  • "A magnificent novel of a type that only Montherlant could produce...The author's feat in embodying much of himself in such an exceptional creation wile maintaining his customary austerity of view an of style, his almost frightening insolence and is extraordinary gift for characterization evoke...admiration." --New York Times Book Review
  • "Indisputably a magnificent writer." --Saturday Review
  • "Wry and likeable" --Time
  • "All of Montherlant's fiction is still available in French in Gallimard's Folio pocket book edition. Nonetheless, it is evident that the wheel of fortune has turned, and Montherlant, as well as his almost exact contemporary and school friend, Louis Aragon, and other superb French writers no more than 10 years old are suffering a real decline in popularity. Have their reputations also declined? Certainly not among French readers who know their work, or among French literary critics...But for an author, the loss of readers, if it continues, is like a death sentence. In Montherlant's case, the time has come to lodge an appeal." --The New York Sun
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