Introduction Chapter One. Metroland: everything that got away 1. Faltering starts 2. ‘Petty Gripes’ and ‘Oua, oua, oua’ 3. The Death Chapter 4. Return to Metroland Chapter Two. The case for / The case against 1. Reviewing and being reviewed 2. The case of Before She Met Me a. Julian Barnes’s reButs to Hermione Lee’s Buts b. Finding the right title Chapter Three. A chronology (of sorts) Chapter Four. Flaubert’s Parrot from ignition to composition 1. Flaubert Stories 2. The fictional narrator Chapter Five. The Barnes apocrypha 1. A Literary Guide to Oxford: the itinerary of a book that was never published 2. The unwritten books which tantalize Chapter Six. Staring at the Sun: a novel of forking roots and paths 1. Multiple roots and titles 2. Early starts Chapter Seven. Fragments of stories: A History of the World in 10½ Chapters 1. Planning, naming and arranging chapters 2. Not so simple stories 3. ‘Parenthesis’ 4. With a little help from my friends Chapter Eight. The Porcupine in the making: writer and translator 1. An outsider’s view 2. Is and is not 3. The ending of the novel 4. The libel risks Chapter Nine. A dictionary of Julian Barnes Chapter Ten. Arthur & George: beginnings and endings 1. First and final steps 2. The blind spots of research 3. The art of beginning 4. Finding a JB title 5. Working out tenses Chapter Eleven. Nothing to Be Frightened Of as an echo chamber 1. The obsession with death: from the early notebooks to Nothing to Be Frightened Of 2. This is not an autobiography 3. Fictionalising memory in The Only Story Chapter Twelve. The Sense of an Ending: time in reverse 1. Prequels in real life 2. A sequel to Metroland? 3. Getting started: the title and the incipit 4. A denser text Conclusion Works Cited Index
Exploring notebooks, drafts, typescripts and publishing correspondence from the archives of the Man Booker prize-winning novelist Julian Barnes, this is an in-depth study of the creative practice of a major contemporary writer.
Vanessa Guignery is Professor of Contemporary English and Postcolonial Literature at the École Normale Supérieure de Lyon, France. Her previous publications include The Fiction of Julian Barnes (2006).
Vanessa Guignery brings to this work her own unparalleled knowledge
of Julian Barnes's work, her years of study in the archives, her
keen critical ability to extract meaning from that study, her
access to the author's own thoughts about his working practices,
and a fluent, lucid and compelling prose style to produce a
brilliant and essential book.
*Merritt Moseley, Professor Emeritus of English, University of
North Carolina at Asheville*
This much-anticipated study of Barnes under erasure by Vanessa
Guignery bristles with fresh insights and with new information
drawn from Barnes himself, as well from his archived and unarchived
writings. An original and revealing examination of the writing and
re-writing process of a major contemporary novelist, it will be
essential reading for all Barnes scholars.
*Peter Childs, Professor of Modern and Contemporary Literature,
Newman University, UK*
Vanessa Guignery’s book is unique in employing Barnes’s discarded
drafts and other archival documents to take readers on an
enlightening journey through the intellectual and psychological
processes that determined the final shape of his published novels.
Her commentary is knowledgeable, lucid, and very insightful.
*Frederick M. Holmes, Emeritus Professor, Lakehead University,
Thunder Bay, Canada*
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