lipalipalipa reviewed Blue of noon by Georges Bataille
Review of 'Blue of noon' on 'Goodreads'
book that feels like being carsick.
Paperback, 192 pages
English language
Published June 30, 2002 by TusQuets.
Blue of Noon (French: Le Bleu du Ciel) is an erotic novella by Georges Bataille. Although Bataille completed the work in 1935, it was not published until Jean-Jacques Pauvert did so in 1957. (Pauvert previously published the writings of the Marquis de Sade.) Urizen Books published Harry Mathews' English-language translation in 1978. The book deals with necrophilia.
book that feels like being carsick.
To love life yet hate death is but a folly. One loves life along with death or one does not love life at all. The essence of love itself is its potent prerogative to perish.
I told her very softly, ‘Don’t cry any more. I just had to have you act crazy. I needed it so as not to die.’
I'm working my way through Bataille's oeuvre as I read his biography. This is the first time I've ever done something like this and I'm having a great time. So far Blue of Noon is my favorite. It is a largely political novel that manages to weave every one of Bataille's philosophical interests into a relatively coherent storyline. This novel has a lot in common with Sartre's Nausea but imho it is better written. Where Nausea feels a little overwritten, Blue of Noon chooses concision and for the project at hand I think that is more appropriate.
In Bataille's own words:
"A story that reveals the possibilities of life is not necessarily an appeal; but it does appeal to a moment of fury without which its author would remain blind to these possibilities, which are those of excess. Of this I am sure: only an intolerable, impossible ordeal can …
I'm working my way through Bataille's oeuvre as I read his biography. This is the first time I've ever done something like this and I'm having a great time. So far Blue of Noon is my favorite. It is a largely political novel that manages to weave every one of Bataille's philosophical interests into a relatively coherent storyline. This novel has a lot in common with Sartre's Nausea but imho it is better written. Where Nausea feels a little overwritten, Blue of Noon chooses concision and for the project at hand I think that is more appropriate.
In Bataille's own words:
"A story that reveals the possibilities of life is not necessarily an appeal; but it does appeal to a moment of fury without which its author would remain blind to these possibilities, which are those of excess. Of this I am sure: only an intolerable, impossible ordeal can give an author the means of achieving that wide-ranging vision that readers weary of the narrow limitations imposed by convention are waiting for."
Forgettable.