Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Gary, Romain - Curtis Cate
Gary, Romain - Curtis Cate
CURTIS CATE
[Romain Gary's] books ring with the echo of a profoundly Russian, if not Manichean, bafflement before the spectacle of a world bristling with new satanic inventions—atomic bombs, brain washing, concentration camps.
This deep sense of protest is as evident as ever in his latest book, "Promise at Dawn," which opens with an imaginary evocation of the grinning gods of stupidity, dogmatic truth, mediocrity and servility. Its original title was to have been "La Lutte Pour l'Honneur"—"the struggle for honor"—but no one needs to know it to realize that this romanticized autobiography is something more than a "life with mother" story. It is the story of a young boy's endeavor to achieve manhood in an age of crumbling values and revolutionary upheaval, and it explains, more explicitly and movingly than Gary has ever done before, why his books are so haunted by a sense of solitude, of bereavement, of a paradise irretrievably lost. (p. 1)
The...
[The entire page is 372 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Jean Garrigue
- Earl W. Foell
- Henri Peyre
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Frederic Morton
- Charles Rolo
- Curtis Cate
- Charles C. Lehrmann
- William Barrett
- Henri Peyre
- Pamela Marsh
- Auberon Waugh
- David Leitch
- Roland A. Champagne
- Barbara Wright
- Daphne Merkin
- John Naughton
- Patrick Breslin
- G. MERMIER and F. COHEN
- Ted R. Spivey
- Sergio Villani
- G. Mermier
- John Weightman
- Daniel E. Rivas
- Copyright
