London Bridge
1964 • 390 pages

One of the last major untranslated works by France's most controversial author, London Bridge is a riotous novel about the London underworld during World War I.

Picking up where Guignol's Band (1944; English translation 1954) left off, Celine's autobiographical narrator recounts his disastrous partnership with a mystical Frenchman (intent on financing a trip to Tibet by winning a gas-mask competition); his uneasy relationship with London's pimps and whores and their common nemesis, Inspector Matthew of Scotland Yard; and, most scandalously, his affair with a baronet's 14-year-old daughter, an English angel whose descent into vice is suspiciously smooth.

He dreams of escaping with her to America to start a new life, but he, his mystical partner, and his underaged mistress finally awake to reality crossing windswept London Bridge. Written in his trademark style - a headlong rush of slang, brusque observation, and quirky lyricism, delivered in machine-gun bursts of prose and ellipses - Celine re-creates the dark days during the Great War with sordid verisimilitude and desperate hilarity, expertly captured in Dominic Di Bernardi's racy translation.


Become a Librarian

Series

Featured Series

2 primary books3 released books

#2 in Guignol's Band

Guignol's Band is a 3-book series with 3 released primary works first released in 1944 with contributions by Louis-Ferdinand Céline and Praktisches Handbuch.


Reviews

Popular Reviews

Reviews with the most likes.

There are no reviews for this book. Add yours and it'll show up right here!


Top Lists

See all (1)

List

1,528 books

Owned

Eric
The Confusion
The Master Swing Trader
Caleb Williams
The Baron in the Trees
The Temptation to Exist
Persian Fire