The Order of the Day

The Order of the Day (French: L'Ordre du jour) is a novel by the French writer Éric Vuillard.[1] In French it is described as a récit, while The Guardian described it as an historical essay with literary flourishes.[2]

The Order of the Day
AuthorÉric Vuillard
Original titleL'Ordre du jour
TranslatorMark Polizzotti
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Genrerécit (narrative)
PublisherActes Sud
Publication date
2017
Published in English
2018
ISBN9781590519707

The book received the Prix Goncourt.[3]

Content

The book sets a wide span from the time before for the accession to power of the National Socialist Party (chapter: A secret meeting),[4] to the Anschluss (chapter: Interview at the Berghof and The art of indecision).[5]

gollark: It's not publicly accessible.
gollark: We were using it.
gollark: What an... amazing... reference?
gollark: Headcanon: Sherlock secretly has a time machine, but lies about it to seem smarter.
gollark: If you try arbitrary Sherlocky inferences in reality, you'll probably just be blatantly wrong because the world is actually very complicated and there are multiple explanations for things.

See also

References

  1. Eric Vuillard (2018). The order of the day. Translated by Mark Polizzotti. New York: Other Press.
  2. Poole, Steven (2 Jan 2019). "The Order of the Day by Éric Vuillard review – creeping towards catastrophe". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  3. "Prix Goncourt pour «L'Ordre du jour» : on ne l'attendait pas !". academie-goncourt.fr (in French). Académie Goncourt. Retrieved 2018-08-17.
  4. Annalisa Quinn. "Éric Vuillard Wins Goncourt Prize for Work on Hitler's Rise". The New York Times.
  5. Claus Clemens. "Großer Abend für 130 preisgekrönte Seiten" (in German). RP-Online.


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