Panics

Barbara Molinard, 1921-1986

Book - 2022

"A collection of thirteen short stories about sickness, death, mental illness, and control by French author Barbara Molinard (1921-1986), who destroyed much of her writing while still alive"--

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FICTION/Molinard Barbara
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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
New York City : The Feminist Press 2022.
Language
English
French
Main Author
Barbara Molinard, 1921-1986 (author)
Other Authors
Emma Ramadan (translator), Marguerite Duras (writer of preface)
Edition
First Feminist Press edition
Item Description
First published in French as Viens by Éditions Mercure de France in 1969.
Physical Description
x, 153 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781558612952
  • The plane from Santa Rosa
  • The severed hand
  • The headless man
  • Come
  • Untitled
  • The meeting
  • The father's apartment
  • The cage
  • The bed
  • Taxi
  • The sponge
  • Happiness
  • I'm alone and it's night
  • The vault / transcribed by Marguerite Duras
  • Translator's note / Emma Ramadan.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Molinard's startling and surreal collection, first published in France in 1969, presents the pitfalls of mental illness in a world made foreign. Prolific yet terrorized by self-doubt, Molinard (1921--1986) destroyed everything she ever wrote, save for the stories preserved by her husband as well as her friend Marguerite Duras, who contributed an introduction. The opener, "The Plane from Santa Rosa," sets the tone with a woman traveling around a city killing time before a flight, window shopping and making chit-chat with clerks. In "Come," an unnamed narrator sits in a train station and struggles to write a travelogue that might be entirely imagined. A section titled "Untitled" consists of various fragments. "Taxi" echoes many of the recurring themes Molinard uses to explore displacement, depression, and despair; in it, a man who doesn't remember getting in a taxi observes the world as it rolls past his window. The collection ends with "The Vault," in which Duras and Molinard have a conversation wherein the author explains her desire to live in a windowless darkened vault, away from all of society. Her writing often reads like a diary, churning with a force driven by illusory sadness. Ramadan's translation is a great gift to readers. (Aug.)

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