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  • Published: 22 April 2015
  • ISBN: 9780141977546
  • Imprint: Penguin Classics
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $27.99
Categories:

On Leave




The rediscovered story of soldiers in Paris during the Algerian war

First published in Paris in 1957, as France's engagement in Algeria became ever more bloody, On Leave received a handful of reviews and soon disappeared from view. Through David Bellos's translation, this lost classic has been rediscovered. Spare, forceful and moving, the novel describes a week in the lives of a sergeant, a corporal and a private, home on leave in Paris. Informed by the many hours Anselme spent talking to conscripts in Paris, On Leave is a timeless evocation of the shame and alienation felt by men returning home from an unpopular war.

  • Published: 22 April 2015
  • ISBN: 9780141977546
  • Imprint: Penguin Classics
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $27.99
Categories:

Praise for On Leave

In fiction, we usually have to wait until long after the guns fall silent to hear such stories. Yet this precious act of literary reclamation on the part of Penguin Classics reveals a novel with a solar-plexus punch that was written from the dark heart of conflict

Boyd Tonkin, Independent

Deeply affecting and relevant

Paris Review

Anselme's 1957 On Leave - now translated by the estimable David Bellos - follows three soldiers in Paris on a 10-day leave. In style and particularly in spirit, it resembles the early works of Aldous Huxley (Crome Yellow or Antic Hay), with their combination of lightness and intellect, their strong ethics and unexpected tenderness

New York Times

A rare find . . . a compelling read . . . the book captures with great precision the sense that all soldiers must feel on returning from the front: that their homeland is no longer home . . . David Bellos is not only one of the best translators in the world - and he is here at his casually brilliant best with a fluent and tangy scholarship - but is also a fine literary scholar. In excavating this forgotten and ignored book and restoring it to its proper context, he has quietly but irrevocably shifted our historical knowledge of what really went on in Paris during the Algerian conflict

Andrew Hussey, Literary Review