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After the War

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A lost young man and a corrupt politician deal with the legacy World War II has left them in this crime novel, by the author of Talking to Ghosts.
1950s Bordeaux is a city plagued by memories and scars of the Second World War. Meanwhile, across the sea, another war has already begun. The young men of France are sent in droves to Algeria, where they wage brutal battle in a conflict so new it has yet to be given a name.
Albert Darlac, a corrupt police chief, fascist sympathizer, and one-time collaborator, will soon discover that not everybody has forgiven or forgotten his wartime crimes. Twenty-year-old Daniel has heard the stories of massacres and mutilations, of ambushes and patrols played out under a burning north African sun. The atrocious loss of his parents and sister in the war that has just ended haunts him. A series of explosive events will bring the destinies of these two men together in this uncompromising masterpiece set in a world driven by retribution . . .
Praise for After the War
"Graphic in its violence but rich in history and psychology, this novel is vivid proof that "after the war, sometimes the war continues." —Kirkus Reviews
"The writing of Hervé Le Corre has a musicality that verges on the poetic. He is the perfect portraitist." —Le Monde (France)
"Composed with all the skill of a virtuoso, mingling the colorful slang of bistros and bad guys with sensitive, sharp, crystalline prose that pierces you to the core. Superb." —Télérama (France)
"Full-blooded and uncompromising. Extraordinary." —L'Express (France)
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    • Kirkus

      July 15, 2019
      This is a bleak tale of personal vengeance set in Bordeaux, France, where memories of the German occupation remain fresh in the late 1950s as the country faces a new conflict in Algeria. French writer Le Corre (Talking to Ghosts, 2014, etc.), known for his crime fiction, has the basics of the genre at work here while history supplies characters and motives. Andre Vaillant has returned to his hometown in Bordeaux in 1958 seeking revenge against Police Superintendent Albert Darlac, who betrayed him during World War II. In a plot with several narrative streams and expansive psychological portraits, Le Corre gradually reveals Vaillant's experiences at Auschwitz and during a postwar period in Paris before he comes home with plans to hurt people tied to Darlac. Vaillant's son, Daniel, whom he was forced to leave behind during the war, copes with military life in Algeria in some of the novel's most compelling scenes. At the center of everything is the monstrous Darlac, who controls much of Bordeaux's illicit activities with favors and sadism, as he did during the occupation, when "all cops were collaborators." It's an ambitious work, and Le Corre doesn't entirely succeed in melding the many parts into a cohesive whole, but even somewhat digressive segments enrich characters and themes. Meanwhile, the police are busy with a string of murders, all blamed on Vaillant but not all committed by him. The other culprit is Darlac, who uses the investigation to mask killings he commits for his personal agenda: one cop, two henchmen, and two people close to home. He also beats and rapes his wife and barely controls his passion for their 15-year-old daughter. His unrelenting cruelty is excessive, as is Le Corre's prose at times, but the writing is generally high-end noir or better and well served by the translation. Graphic in its violence but rich in history and psychology, this novel is vivid proof that "after the war, sometimes the war continues."

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