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Things: A Story of the Sixties with A Man Asleep

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Two thematically-related novellas by Georges Perec in one volume. In each, Perec probes our obsession with society’s trappings—the seductive mass of things that masquerade as stability and meaning.

In Things: A Story of the Sixties, Jerome and Sylvie, a young, upwardly mobile couple lust for the good life, caught between the fantasy of “the film they would have liked to live” and the reality of life’s daily mundanities.

The nameless student in A Man Asleep attempts to purify himself entirely of material desires and ambition. He longs “to want nothing. Just to wait, until there is nothing left to wait for. Just to wander, and to sleep.” Yearning to exist on neutral ground as “a blessed parenthesis,” he discovers something unexpected.

With the American publication of Life: A User’s Manual in 1987, Georges Perec was recognized in the United States as one of this century’s most innovative writers. Things: A Story of the Sixties is accessible, sobering, and deeply involving. Each novel distills Perec’s unerring grasp of the human condition and displays his rare comic talent, detachment, and compassion.

Required reading for anyone interested in the evolution of this modern master -- Andrew Motion ― Observer

As a witty attack on consumerism Things is as much a parable of the Nineties as it is a story of the Sixties ― Sunday Times

Perec's first novel is a masterpiece of elegaic mockery ― Financial Times

Things, Perec's first novel, is an innovative, perceptive and even moving study of corrosive consumerism ― Independent

[A Man Asleep is] grimly obsessing...one turns the pages with unlikely fascination -- Euan Cameron ― Sunday Telegraph

About the Author

Georges Perec (1936-82) won the Prix Renaudot in 1965 for his first novel Things: A Story of the Sixties, and went on to exercise his unrivalled mastery of language in almost every imaginable kind of writing, from the apparently trivial to the deeply personal. He composed acrostics, anagrams, autobiography, criticism, crosswords, descriptions of dreams, film scripts, heterograms, lipograms, memories, palindromes, plays, poetry, radio plays, recipes, riddles, stories short and long, travel notes, univocalics, and, of course, novels. Life: A User's Manual, which draws on many of Perec's other works, appeared in 1978 after nine years in the making and was acclaimed a masterpiece to put beside Joyce's Ulysses. It won the Prix Medicis and established Perec's international reputation.

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