-
Newcomers could threaten Christiania's hippie soul, locals fear
-
Hornets sting Knicks to maintain playoff push
-
German 'green village' rides out Mideast energy storm
-
US in the spotlight at WTO meet
-
Cyclone triggers outages at major Australian LNG plants
-
US judge suspends govt sanctions on AI company Anthropic
-
US currency to bear Trump's signature, Treasury says
-
Bolivia beat Suriname 2-1 to advance in World Cup playoffs
-
Ukraine destroys Russian terror-oil exports
-
Mets hammer Pirates on historic day of MLB openers
-
Italy stay in World Cup hunt as Wales, Ireland suffer penalty heartbreak
-
Italy need to climb "Everest" in World Cup play-of final: Gattuso
-
Czechs fight back to beat Ireland in World Cup play-off
-
Wales' World Cup dream ended by Bosnia and Herzegovina
-
Mbappe on target as France shrug off red card to beat Brazil
-
Italy beat Northern Ireland to keep World Cup hopes alive
-
Mexico blames oil slick on illegal dumping
-
Gyokeres treble sends Sweden past Ukraine in World Cup play-offs
-
OpenAI shelves plans for erotic chatbot
-
Klopp hails Salah as one of Liverpool's 'all-time greats'
-
Sinner and Gauff advance with ease at Miami Open
-
Trump pushes back Iran strikes deadline
-
South Africa disinvited from G7 in France
-
Oil climbs, stocks slide as Iran war uncertainty reigns
-
Alexander-Arnold must accept 'unfair' England snub, says Tuchel
-
Ko fires 60 to grab early lead at LPGA Ford Championship
-
Arctic sea ice at lowest level ever this winter
-
Oscars to leave Hollywood in 2029: Academy
-
Trump denies he's desperate for Iran deal, Israel short on troops
-
Lagos secures flood insurance for 4 million at-risk Nigerians
-
In crime-hit Peru, candidates vie to be 'meanest sheriff'
-
Kadioglu fires Turkey past Romania, to brink of World Cup
-
Sinner rips Tiafoe to reach Miami Open semis
-
US lays it on the line as WTO mulls future of global trading
-
Joy, scepticism across west Africa after UN vote on slave trade
-
Salah would be 'asset' says San Diego FC owner
-
Parmesan exports doing grate... but sales melt in Italy
-
US cannot meet Iran war-induced LNG shortfall: industry leaders
-
Trump denies being 'desperate' for Iran deal
-
US envoy to UK warns against cancelling king's visit
-
IOC's new gender testing throws up multiple questions
-
Malinin back to his best as third world skating title beckons
-
Cuban children's heart hospital makes tough choices amid US blockade
-
Oil climbs, stocks slide on uncertainty over US-Iran talks
-
Nepal's PM-to-be delivers first post-election message in rap, urges unity
-
Vernon wins wind-hit Tour of Catalonia stage as Pidcock climbs to second
-
ChatGPT's taste for literary nonsense sparks alarm
-
Paul McCartney recalls Yesterday with first album in five years
-
'True miracle': Napoleon's long-lost hat to go on display
-
Lost in space: Sperm struggles to navigate during weightless sex
France's famed pro-Nazi writer returns 78 years on
It is a rare thing when the story of a book's publication is as fascinating as the plot of the novel itself.
But that might be said of "Guerre" (War) by one of France's most celebrated and controversial literary figures, Louis-Ferdinand Celine, which arrives in bookstores on Thursday, some 78 years after its manuscript disappeared.
Celine's reputation has somehow survived the fact that he was one of France's most eager collaborators with the Nazis.
Already a superstar thanks to his debut novel "Journey to the End of the Night" (1932) -- which is still taught in schools -- Celine became one of the most ardent anti-Semitic propagandists even before France's occupation.
In June 1944, with the Allies advancing on Paris, the writer was forced to abandon a pile of his manuscripts in his Montmartre apartment.
Celine expected rough treatment, having spent the war carousing with the Gestapo, fingering Jews and foreigners to the authorities and publishing racist pamphlets about Jewish world conspiracies.
For decades, no one knew what happened to his papers, and he angrily accused resistance fighters of burning them.
But at some point in the 2000s, they ended up with retired journalist Jean-Pierre Thibaudat, who passed them -- completely out of the blue -- to Celine's heirs last summer.
- 'A miracle' -
Despite this unsettling history, the reviews of the resulting 150-page novel, published by Gallimard, have been unanimous in their praise.
"The end of a mystery, the discovery of a great text," writes Le Point; a "miracle," says Le Monde; "breathtaking," gushes Le Journal du Dimanche.
Gallimard is expecting blockbuster sales: 80,000 copies have been printed for Thursday's release.
The publishing house has yet to say whether there will be translations.
Like much of Celine's work, "Guerre" is deeply autobiographical, recounting his terrible experiences during World War I.
It opens with 20-year-old Brigadier Ferdinand finding himself miraculously alive after waking up on a Belgian battlefield, and follows his treatment and hasty departure for England -- all based on Celine's real experiences.
His time across the Channel is the subject of another newly discovered novel, "Londres" (London), to be published this autumn.
If French reviewers seem strangely reluctant to focus on Celine's anti-Semitism, it is partly because his early writings ("Guerre" is thought to date from 1934) show little sign of it.
"Journey to the End of the Night" was actually a hit among progressives for its anti-war message, as well as a raw, slang-filled style that stuck two fingers up at bourgeois sensibilities.
Celine's attitude to the Jews only revealed itself in 1937 with the publication of a pamphlet, "Trifles for a Massacre", which set him on a new path of racial hatred and conspiracy-mongering.
He never back-tracked. After the war, he launched a campaign of Holocaust-denial and sought to muddy the waters around his own war-time exploits -- allowing him to worm his way back into France without facing any repercussions.
- 'Divine surprise' -
Many in the French literary scene seem keen to separate early and late Celine.
"These manuscripts come at the right time -- they are a divine surprise -- for Celine to become a writer again: the one who matters, from 1932 to 1936," literary historian Philippe Roussin told AFP.
Other critics say the early Celine was just hiding his true feelings.
They highlight a quote that may explain the gap between his progressive novels and reactionary feelings: "Knowing what the reader wants, following fashions like a shopgirl, is the job of any writer who is very financially constrained," Celine wrote to a friend.
Despite his descent into Nazism, he was one of the great chroniclers of the trauma of World War I and the malaise of the inter-war years.
An exhibition about the discovery of the manuscripts opens on Thursday at the Gallimard Gallery and includes the original, hand-written sheets of "Guerre".
They end with a line that is typical of Celine: "I caught the war in my head. It is locked in my head."
In the final years before his death in 1961, Celine endlessly bemoaned the loss of his manuscripts.
The exhibition has a quote from him on the wall: "They burned them, almost three manuscripts, the pest-purging vigilantes!"
This was one occasion -- not the only one -- where he was proved wrong.
A.Aguiar--PC