Product Details
Death on the Installment Plan

Death on the Installment Plan
By Louis Celine

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #165664 in Books
  • Published on: 1971-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 592 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Louis-Ferdinand Celine's second novel continues the style of black humor and the delirious but immediate prose that made the author instantly famous in his native France in the aftermath of World War I. Celine's goal was to create a kind of literature that described people in honest terms, unembellished by the conventions of fiction, no matter how mean and crummy they were, and to portray them in the real language of everyday life and thought. He succeeds darkly and brilliantly in Death on the Installment Plan, yet it is also a sweet kind of book, a young boy's coming-of-age tale, struggling with his parents and looking for his own kind of personal freedom.


Customer Reviews

Better than Journey...5
I hesitate to declare favorites (favorite movie, favorite book, etc.) Why hesitate? For one, I'm not even sure which ones are my favorite. More importantly, just because I like something doesn't mean you're going to like it. So I will not tell you that this is my favorite book of all time(even though it is). Rather, I will attempt to set down some guideline to help you to determine whether or not to purchase Death on the Installment.

First, let me ask you: have you read 'Journey to the End of the Night'? If the answer is yes (and if you liked it) then my responce to you is go ahead and read Death. Death is very similar to Journey, only Death takes place earlier in the life of Celine/Bardamu.

Plot (yes, there is one...kinda):
The book begins with a grown Bardamu, practicing medicine in the suburbs of Paris. Soon the action flashes back to his childhood, which is what the rest of the book is about. Like Journey, this book follows the narrator as he moves around to various destinations, including a number of apprenticeships in Paris, boarding school in England, and a farm. There are developed characters besides Bardamu; there are his parents, his uncle, and (best of all) a crazy Inventor who takes young Bardamu under his wing.

It was Bukowski who pointed me towards Celine. He praised Journey, but he said nothing about Death. Death was unavailable to me, and after I was done with Journey I tried to read Guignol's Band. I couldn't read it though due to the frequent incoherent streamofconscious rants (and perhaps because it wasn't a Manheim Translation). But then I moved and found Death on Credit (same...Credit is just the UK title, whereas it's installment plan in US), read it, and liked it even better than Journey. There are one or two short parts of surreal/hallucinatory sequences. Even those are short; 98% of the book I would describe as concrete events writen coherently.

Celine has changed his style a little with his second book. Ellipses are used much more often here than they were in Journey. But I found this to work quite well, both in terms of readability, and in terms of emulating actual speach and thoughts. Also, there are no chapters in Death.

Every thing else is what you'd expect from Celine after reading Journey. The bipolar nature of the work--it will make you laugh, then twenty pages later you'll be crying. There's plenty of humor. There's pleanty of sexual escapades. Plenty of other little adventures that you'll enjoy reading about.

Oh yeah...also, there is less blatant philosophying(?) in this book. In Journey he'd go off on a rant about how people are terrible, and how society is evil, and how he believes in nothing. Don't worry! Those themes/ideas are all present here, he just doesn't come out and say it, rather, he shows them.

So...if you've read Journey and liked it, I strongly suggest you read Death.

If you haven't read Journey to the End of the Night, I suggest reading that first. It's not completely necessary. I think that you'll enjoy this book more if you've read Journey. Journey is perhaps the more readable of the two (at least the more traditionally readable). But if you want to read this and then do Journey be my guest, let me know how it goes.

This book might be, but probably shouldn't be, compaired to--Huck Finn, Ham on Rye (Bukowski), Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, A Raw Youth (Dostoevsky).



IT'S UP TO YOU TO READ THE BEST & SKIP THE REST5
It's the real deal ... read it ... Celine's created a narrator who can relate what he observes so that you see it too ... not so common ... read the 5-star reviews ... a big THANK YOU to John Dolan for writing reviews about Celine !! (all wannabe savvy readers should IMMEDIATELY seek out www.exile.ru to read Mr. Dolan's Celine reviews in eXile #206, 27 Jan 05 and eXile #174, 18 Sep 03)

Banal drudgery1
Ignore the undeserving pseudointellectual hype surrounding this book. It is nothing but a displeasureable collection of banal observations and anecdotes, not the dark comedy which others profess it to be.