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Word: sagan (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...time, grownups wrote fables for little girls. Nowadays little girls seem to be writing fables for grownups. Where once adolescents confided their innermost thoughts to "Dear Diary," they now rush them, hot off the typewriter, to their literary agents. Most famous and successful among teen-age sophisticates is Francoise Sagan, who wrote Bonjour Tristesse at 18. Now 21. she is grown up, but there seems to be no shortage of young successors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Little Women at Work | 9/10/1956 | See Source »

...favorite pose of the very young is to abandon hope because they still have so much. One of the best-paid literary practitioners of this kind of premature despair is Paris' intellectual gamin, Françoise Sagan, just turned 21. As readers who pushed the sales of Bonjour Tristesse past the million mark know, Sagan wears her world-weary rue with a spicy difference. In her novels, sin triumphs over everything but syntax. This high-styled amorality led one French critic to sum up her work as "classicism in panties...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Toujours la Tristesse | 8/20/1956 | See Source »

...Author Sagan is all set to repeat her success with A Certain Smile. More than 200,000 copies have been sold in France, and the U.S. publisher had 100,000 in print before publication. In Bonjour Tristesse, the teen-age heroine lived on cozy terms with her widowed father's succession of mistresses until he proposed to marry one, at which point the daughter showed her claws and drove the poor woman to suicide. A Certain Smile is only slightly less scandalous, and similarly concerned with Author Sagan's thirst for drinking at the fountain of eternal middle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Toujours la Tristesse | 8/20/1956 | See Source »

...somewhat spavined and haggard, a kind of walking ruin of a roué, and, of course, old enough to be Dominique's father. What makes their liaison inevitable is that they both fear the binding emotions of real love like a plague and hence, in Author Sagan's Sartrian thinking, respect each other's freedom. Both cherish isolated moments of intense sensation, encountered rather like chance oases in the desert journey of what they regard as life's everyday meaninglessness. After one passionate week on the Riviera stretches into two, Dominique finds that she cannot hand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Toujours la Tristesse | 8/20/1956 | See Source »

Plenty of Nothing. Author Sagan's prose is as disciplined as her characters are not. Her style is spare, lucid and psychologically astute. Yet her novel is a petition in spiritual and emotional bankruptcy. The word "nothing" recurs with obsessive frequency in describing what the heroine thinks and feels. Hemingway reduced the value problem of his "lost generation" to "What is moral is what you feel good after." Sagan has reduced hers to "What you feel is good, if you feel anything." Even the heroine's parting smile precedes a somewhat rueful summing up: "Well, what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Toujours la Tristesse | 8/20/1956 | See Source »

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