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Mercier and Camier

 
Wikipedia: Mercier and Camier
Mercier and Camier  
Beckett Mercier French.jpg
1st edition (French)
Author Samuel Beckett
Original title 'Mercier et Camier'
Translator Samuel Beckett
Country France
Language French
Publisher Les Éditions de Minuit (French); Grove Press (English)
Publication date 1970
Published in
English
1974
Media type Print, Paperback & Hardcover
Pages 123
ISBN 0-8021-3235-9
OCLC 1240157

Mercier and Camier is a novel by Samuel Beckett. Written immediately before his celebrated trilogy of Molloy, Malone Dies and The Unnamable, Mercier et Camier (1946, translated in 1974) was Beckett's first attempt at extended prose fiction in French. It features the 'pseudocouple' Mercier and his friend the private investigator Camier, and their repeated attempts to leave a city (a thinly disguised version of Dublin) only to abandon their journey and return. Frequent visits are paid to "Helen's Place", a bawdy house modelled on that of legendary Dublin madam Becky Cooper (much like Becky Cooper, Helen has a talking parrot). A much-changed Watt makes a cameo appearance, bringing his stick down on a pub table and yelling 'Fuck life!'.

Beckett withheld the novel from publication until 1970. The English translation that followed in 1974 featured substantial alterations and deletions from the original text.

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