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The Skin of Dreams by Raymond Queneau

Book

The Skin of Dreams

Raymond Queneau, Chris Clarke, Paul Fournel

New York Review Books · Print & ebook · January 30, 2024

Reading lane: French Literary Criticism

A Fiction pick for readers exploring The Skin of Dreams.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Playful Layers

Come here for

  • layered literary play
  • cultural-literacy side quests

Expect

  • short-form fiction
  • readable on a second look

Book Details

Authors
Raymond Queneau, Chris Clarke, Paul Fournel
Publisher
New York Review Books
Published
January 30, 2024
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
French Literary Criticism · French Literary Collections
Reading lane
French Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Visionary Fiction

  • Absurdist Fiction

  • 20th-Century French Fiction

About This Book

In this delightful, cinema-inspired daydream of a novel, an identity-shifting protagonist uses the everyday inspirations of his life to catapult himself into the realm of imagination, blurring the boundaries between reality and fantasy. The Skin of Dreams is a novel of waking dreams. Even as he lives his life, Jacques L’Aumône, its hero, daydreams a hundred other possible lives. A few lines on a page, a chance encounter, a remark overheard in passing, any of these are enough...

Read full description

In this delightful, cinema-inspired daydream of a novel, an identity-shifting protagonist uses the everyday inspirations of his life to catapult himself into the realm of imagination, blurring the boundaries between reality and fantasy. The Skin of Dreams is a novel of waking dreams. Even as he lives his life, Jacques L’Aumône, its hero, daydreams a hundred other possible lives. A few lines on a page, a chance encounter, a remark overheard in passing, any of these are enough to kick things into gear and send him off outside of himself to become a boxer, a general, a bishop, or a lord. He lives alongside his life with diligence and steadfastness; and the passage from real to dream is so natural for him that he no longer knows precisely which him he is. Eventually he becomes an actor in Hollywood, and the basis of countless dreams for others. This Jacques L’Aumône, like the characters who surround him, has the same sort of haunting and fluid consistency as someone that we might dream of in our beds at night. And reverie, here, is born through the tale’s humor, which is as gentle as it is cruel, as well as by way of a writing technique that is itself drawn from one of Queneau’s great loves, the cinema.

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