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Flammarion Illustrated Edition - Printable Version +- Story-Portal (https://time-tales.af/storys) +-- Forum: EBOOK (https://time-tales.af/storys/forumdisplay.php?fid=27) +--- Forum: EBOOK (https://time-tales.af/storys/forumdisplay.php?fid=28) +--- Thread: Flammarion Illustrated Edition (/showthread.php?tid=2465) |
Flammarion Illustrated Edition - WMASG - 12-11-2025 Les Amitiés Particulières by Roger Peyrefitte is widely considered one of the classic pieces of romantic schoolboy fiction. It is the story of an older and a younger boy in a French boarding school who become romantically attached and about the tragedy that ensues when the affair is discovered and mishandled by the priests who run the school. The 'affair' actually is no more than some passionate letters and a couple of stolen kisses. It was translated into English and made into a film and in 1953 Flammarion published a de luxe edition in two volumes with 24 lithographic illustrations by Peyrefitte's favourite illustrator Gaston Goor (1902 - 1977). Quote: Like many men, Roger Peyrefitte had his first sexual experiences as a teen with a friend and, as he aged, he never lost his taste for youth. After a successful posting to Athens from roughly twenty-five to thirty-one, albeit with some run-ins with the police for disturbing the local lads, he was dismissed from the French foreign service at thirty-three for his affair with a fourteen year-old. Reinstated to work for the Vichy government in 1943, Peyrefitte returned to his first love in his much-praised and much-attacked debut novel Special Friendships [or Les amitiés particulières], in which one student at a Catholic boys school asks another the immortal question, "Do you know the things one should not know?" Despite its subtle but clear portrayal of homosexuality among many of the innocent or conniving boys and a few of the priests, the novel won the Prix Renaudot in 1945. (France was enjoying an orgy of gay writing: After Proust came Gide, Cocteau, Henry de Montherlant, Marcel Jouhandeau, and Genet in 1943.) |