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  Children's Island (1986)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-15-2025, 10:56 AM - Replies (1)

   


First published in Sweden in 1976, Children’s Island increased the popularity and critical acclaim of its author, P. C. Jersild. The novel, which has sold more than 400,000 copies in Sweden alone, has been translated into French, German, Dutch, and Czechoslovakian. A film was made out of it. The University of Nebraska Press is the first to make available in English a book in some ways reminiscent of J. D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye.Children’s Island is told from the point of view of a ten-year-old boy, Reine Larsson, who succeeds in not going to summer camp. Reine stays home because time is running out: puberty, sexual desire, adulthood are threatening to rob him of the energy he needs to find the answers to life’s dilemmas. He lulls his divorced mother into thinking he has gone to camp and confronts the task of supporting his love for McDonald’s hamburgers. What he finds in Stockholm—a kind of Children’s Island all its own—is a series of often hilarious adventures that help Jersild define contemporary society. It’s a society of isolation, violence, and aggressive commercialism, a society actually much more threatening to Reine’s psyche and well-being than the changes taking place within his own body. The revulsion he feels for his sexuality and that of others becomes symbolic of the alienation that defines the world Reine grows up in. Robert E. Bjork, general editor of the Modern Scandinavian Literature in Translation series, calls Children’s Island “an extremely entertaining, extremely funny, and very serious book.” 

Quote:"Reine did not wake up until almost seven that evening. A rhyme kept running through his head. There was a silly twerp, who couldn’t even burp. But he hadn’t made that up himself, so he had no difficulty in getting rid of it. He got out of the guest bed with the empty beer can under his arm and decided that he was not hungry. He was never hungry when he first got up, as if his stomach were stuffed with air. He burped, went out to the stairway garbage chute, and threw the beer can down it, counting the seconds before the can rattled into the bin. Three seconds. If you fell — was there time to relive your life in three seconds?

The beer made itself felt, and he went into the bathroom to pee. It felt so good he wanted to shout. He tried out a couple of squeaks, but they weren’t up to much. If you gave a full-throated yell, you could be heard in the john in the apartment below, and they might phone the police, thinking there had been a break-in. He pulled his penis out into a long pink string and let it go; it at once wrinkled up again. Penis, prick, cock . . . or wee-wee, as Mom used to say when he was small. None of the words sounded right. Penis sounded like the name of a spice, prick sounded nuts. And cock? Cock sounded brittle in some way, like a thin pipe of brick-colored clay. Cockpot. Drop the cockpot on the floor. Ocarina. Clay cuckoo. The right word was male member. He inspected his male member, which looked like a skin ice cream cone. He pulled down his trousers and examined the base of his male member and the wrinkled pale brown scrotum. Good, no hairs, only a little white down. How long had he got? A year? Two years? The day he reached puberty, all was lost. Then he would be drawn into the world of adults and there would be no return. Imprisoned in hominess and other mucky things, your thoughts would never again be pure. All your energy would go on getting sex, and there would be nothing left to solve problems like whether God existed and if so, what had he sounded like when he created Adam. Perhaps this was his last summer, as children matured so young these days: two in his class already had hair. Every day, Reine examined his private parts with tenor as if he were scared of cancer.

He pulled up his jeans, flushed the john, then unscrewed the knob on the tank and lifted the lid. He had fastened a piece of paper inside the lid with some blue tape. He pulled it free and checked that all was in order. On the paper was:

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  Bryce - Whitethorn (2006)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-15-2025, 10:47 AM - Replies (1)

   


From Bryce Courtenay comes a new novel about Africa. The time is 1939. White South Africa is a deeply divided nation with many of the Afrikaner people fanatically opposed to the English.

The world is also on the brink of war and South Africa elects to fight for the Allied cause against Germany. Six-year-old Tom Fitzsaxby finds himself in The Boys Farm, an orphanage in a remote town in the high mountains, where the Afrikaners side fiercely with Hitler's Germany.

Tom's English name proves sufficient for him to be ostracised, marking him as an outsider. And so begin some of life's tougher lessons for the small, lonely boy. Like the Whitethorn, one of Africa's most enduring plants, Tom learns how to survive in the harsh climate of racial hatred. Then a terrible event sends him on a journey to ensure that justice is done. On the way, his most unexpected discovery is love.

This is a return to Africa for me, a revisiting of a past that wasn't always easy, but which nevertheless gave my childhood a richness and understanding that served me well in later life. After ten books set in my beloved Australia, Whitethorn is back to that fierce and dark landscape where kindness and cruelty, love and hate share the same backyard. I do hope you enjoy it.

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  Éric - L’Amour brut (1993)
Posted by: Simon - 12-14-2025, 11:01 PM - Replies (1)

   


Tom est un adolescent solaire, au sourire et à l’indépendance indéfectibles, à la sensualité presque indécente. Rejeté par sa famille, par les institutions scolaires, par ses semblables enfin, il fait le douloureux apprentissage de l’amour et de la jouissance. Avec May, garce magnifique qui ne lui accordera pas un regard, avec des garçons ensuite, qui les premiers le poursuivent et le désirent. Mais sont-ils à même de lui apporter l’amour idéalisé dont il rêve ? L’Amour brut est un hymne à la jeunesse, à l’innocence, à la passion, en un mot, à la liberté. Éric Jourdan est l’auteur des Mauvais Anges, de Saccage et du Garçon de joie, publiés à La Musardine, ainsi que de nombreux romans chez d’autres éditeurs.


Tom is a sunny teenager, with an unfailing smile and independence, and almost indecent sensuality. Rejected by his family, by educational institutions, and finally by his peers, he undergoes the painful apprenticeship of love and enjoyment. With May, a magnificent bitch who won't give him a glance, then with boys, who are the first to pursue him and desire him. But are they able to bring him the idealized love he dreams of? Raw Love is a hymn to youth, innocence, passion, in a word, freedom. Éric Jourdan is the author of Mauvais Anges, Saccage and Le Garçon de joie, published by La Musardine, as well as numerous novels by other publishers.

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  Eric - Le garcon de joie (2007)
Posted by: Simon - 12-14-2025, 10:57 PM - Replies (1)

   


Une nuit de printemps. Dans l'ombre des arbres, un garçon en attend un autre. Pour le tuer. Jalousie ? Règlement de comptes ? Le point culminant d'une amitié tumultueuse entre deux jeunes hommes qui ont la rage de vivre. La séduction, la corruption et la nostalgie de la pureté se mêlent dans ces relations troubles. Ces éléments d'une intrigue policière se doublent d'une vision singulière de la jeunesse, écartelée entre la soif de réussite immédiate et la patience obligée de la vie. L'un triche, avec son physique de beau garçon et son intelligence dévoyée : il devient « le garçon de joie ». L'autre suit, sans savoir distinguer le Bien et le Mal, coupable et innocent à la fois. Voici enfin Le Garçon de joie dans sa version intégrale. Eric Jourdan continue ainsi ce qu'il a commencé à 16 ans avec Les Mauvais Anges : disséquer comme personne les tourments de la jeunesse que l'on retrouve dans son dernier ouvrage, un recueil de nouvelles, Portrait d'un jeune seigneur en dieu des moissons (La Musardine).

A spring night. In the shadow of the trees, a boy waits for another. To kill him. Jealousy? Settling scores ? The culmination of a tumultuous friendship between two young men who have a rage for life. Seduction, corruption and nostalgia for purity mingle in these troubled relationships. These elements of a detective story are coupled with a singular vision of youth, torn between the thirst for immediate success and the obligatory patience of life. One cheats, with his handsome physique and his misguided intelligence: he becomes “the boy of joy”. The other follows, without knowing how to distinguish Good and Evil, guilty and innocent at the same time.

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  Jourdan, Eric - Aux gémonies (2013)
Posted by: Simon - 12-14-2025, 10:54 PM - Replies (1)

   


Pour mettre à l’épreuve leur amitié malmenée par une rivalité amoureuse, deux jeunes photographes, Matthias et Vivien, amis depuis le lycée, décident de partir en reportage à l’autre bout du monde. Ils devront suivre les troupes d’une force internationale dans les forêts et montagnes de Birmanie afin de « couvrir » la destruction de champs de pavots dans le célèbre Triangle d’or. C’est là, dans ce no man’s land entre trois frontières, qu’ils tomberont aux mains de rebelles et de trafiquants et connaîtront l’enfer d’un camp de prisonniers dans la jungle. Et ce n’est plus simplement leur camaraderie qui est en jeu,
mais leu vie même. Avec Aux gémonies, Éric Jourdan livre une oeuvre forte, visionnaire et bouleversante, dans la lignée de ses plus grands romans, où l’amour et l’amitié se mêlent et où la sensualité affleure à
chaque page. À seize ans, Éric Jourdan écrit Les Mauvais Anges, interdit deux fois en France et censuré vingt-neuf années durant. Le livre est réédité à La Musardine en 2001, et connaît depuis un succès
constant. Il a publié de nombreux autres romans (Charité, Révolte, Sang,
Sexuellement incorrect, Détresse et violence, Trois coeurs), ainsi que des contes et nouvelles malveillants pour enfants. À La Musardine, à côté des Mauvais Anges, sont disponibles L’Amour brut, Saccage, Le Garçon de joie, Le Jeune Soldat (Lectures amoureuses) et Portrait d’un jeune seigneur en dieu des moissons.


To put to the test their friendship, battered by a romantic rivalry, two young photographers, Matthias and Vivien, friends since high school, decide to go reporting to the other side of the world. They must
follow the troops of an international force in the forests and mountains of Burma in order to “cover” the destruction of fields of poppies in the famous Golden Triangle. It's there, in this no man's land
between three borders, that they will fall into the hands of rebels and traffickers and will experience the hell of a prison camp in the jungle. And it’s no longer just their camaraderie that’s at stake,
but their very life. With Aux gémonies, Éric Jourdan delivers a work strong, visionary and moving, in the tradition of his greatest novels, where love and friendship mingle and where sensuality surfaces each page. At sixteen, Éric Jourdan wrote Les Mauvais Anges, banned twice in France and censored for twenty-nine years. THE book was republished by La Musardine in 2001, and has since enjoyed success
constant. He has published numerous other novels (Charité, Révolte, Sang, Sexually Incorrect, Distress and Violence, Three Hearts), as well as malicious stories and short stories for children. At La Musardine, at side of the Bad Angels, are available Raw Love, Rampage, The Boy of Joy, The Young Soldier (Loving Readings) and Portrait of a young lord as harvest god.

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