Hell (French: L'Enfer) is Henri Barbusse's second novel, written in 1908, in which the unnamed narrator spies on his fellow house guests through a peephole in his wall.
Author | Henri Barbusse |
---|---|
Original title | L'Enfer |
Language | French |
Published | 1908 |
Published in English | 1918 |
Plot summary
editThe narrator, unmarried and friendless, books a room in a Paris boarding house. By chance he finds a hole in his wall, through which he can see the adjoining room and its inhabitants. From the other side, he witnesses lesbianism, adultery, incest, thievery, vicious proselytizing and death, musing to the reader on the philosophical implications of the events he witnesses. His voyeurism eventually convinces him to quit his room and find a fulfilling life of his own, but as he attempts to leave he is crippled with backache and blindness.
Literary criticism
editHell was notably popular and widely discussed in France, selling more than a hundred thousand copies in 1917 alone.[1] Colin Wilson gave considerable attention to Barbusse's novel in his influential work The Outsider.[2]
English translations
editL'Enfer has been translated into English several times, first as The Inferno by Edward J. O'Brien for Boni and Liveright in 1918 in a heavily abridged form, then again as The Inferno by John Rodker for Joiner & Steele in 1932, and then in full as Hell by Robert Baldick for Chapman and Hall in 1966 - later reissued by Turtle Point Press in 1995.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Cather Studies Volume 7 | Willa Cather Archive".
- ^ Wilson, Collin, The Outsider: An Enquiry Into the Nature of the Sickness of Mankind in the Mid-Twentieth Century, London: Gollancz, 1956
- ^ "Hell – Turtle Point Press".