Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Suicide (novel)

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Translator
  
Jan Steyn

Publication date
  
2008

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
2008

Page count
  
128

Country
  
France

Language
  
French

Published in English
  
March 2010

Pages
  
128

Author
  
Édouard Levé

Publisher
  
Éditions Gallimard

Published in english
  
March 2010

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Suicide is a short novel by Edouard Levé noted for its precise language and seemingly random structure meant to imitate human memory.

Contents

An excerpt of Suicide titled Life in Three Houses appeared in the April 2011 issue of Harper's.

Plot

The work's prose is a second person narration detailing disconnected episodes about "you", the narrator's friend that committed suicide some twenty years before. The descriptions are never more than a few paragraphs long. They culminate and characterize "you".

After the main body of the work (the prose), there are pages of verse that "your wife" found in "your desk drawer". They are written in first person with the word "me" ending almost every line of each tercet in the English translation.

Major themes

One of the work's major themes is the coherence of a human life. The narrator and "you" see human life as an absurd collection of meaningless events, but "your" suicide gives previously meaningless actions meaning. "Your" suicide organizes "your" life into a coherent narrative. The narrator claims that "your" suicide has actually become the beginning of "your" life story. The book, fittingly, begins by recounting "your" suicide.

Levé's suicide

Much of the analysis and interpretation of Suicide hinges on the fact that ten days after giving the text to his publisher, Levé hanged himself. The book has been interpreted as autobiographical. It has also been viewed as an internal dialogue between the two sides of Levé ("you" and "I").

Throughout the work, Levé ensures "your" motivations for committing suicide are unknown to the narrator and, consequently, the reader. In the book, "you" leave open a comic book to a two-page spread as an explanation of "your" suicide. But, when "your wife" sees "you" dead, she knocks over the comic book. Nobody knows which page "you" thought explained "your" suicide.

Contrastingly, Levé is said to have left a suicide note. Some reviewers say these differences between the book and Levé's own life were meant to separate the book from Levé's own act.

References

Suicide (novel) Wikipedia