Bellos, David
Dates
- Existence: 1945-06-25-
Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:
53 Days / Perec, Georges ; David Bellos, translator ; Mathews H ; Roubaud J., 2000
This is the last book written by George Perec who completed eleven chapters of the planned 28. Harry Mathews and Jacques Roubaud assembled Perec's notes for the remaining chapters of this inventive mystery story for publication. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Georges Perec A Life in Words, 1993
Life a User's Manual, 1987
[Review of Perec's Life: A User's Manual Book] / Wilde, John; Queneau R; Bellos D., 1994
Wilde reviews the English translation by David Bellos of Perec's major work first published in France in 1978. The article contains a photographic portrait of Perec with his cat. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Things / A Man Asleep, 1990
The book consists of two novels. Things deals with a young French lower middle class couple in the post-WWII era who are marketing researchers. They want to be acquire possessions but do not have the necessary job skills or work ethnic to become wealthy. A Man Asleep is an existensionlist story about a nameless person that is written entirely in the second voice. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Thoughts of Sorts, 2009
Amazon.com: Thoughts of Sorts, one of Georges Perec's final works, was published posthumously in France in 1985. With this translation, David Bellos, Perec's preeminent translator, has completed the Godine list of Perec's great works translated into English and has provided an introduction to this master of systematic versatility. Thoughts of Sorts; is a compilation of musings and essays attempting to circumscribe, in Perec's words, my experience of the world not in terms of the reflections it casts in distant places, but at its actual point of breaking surface. Perec investigates the ways by which we define our place in the world, reveling in list-making, orientating, classifying. This book employs all of the modes of questioning explored by his previous books, and, as the same time breaks new ground of its own, ending with a question mark in typical/atypical Perec fashion. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
W or the Memory of Childhood, 1988
This novel contains two distinct alternating biographies: the first is an allegorical story of W, a bizarre, mythical island civilization, symbolizing the Holocaust. It is printed in italics. The second text is Perec's memories of his childhood in Paris. Perec writes in his introduction that the two stories "are in fact inextricably bound up with each other, as though neither could exist on its own, as though it was only their coming together, the distant light they cast on each other, that could make apparent what is never quite said in one,never quite said in the other, but said only in their fragile overlapping." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.