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Eat Him if You Like [Paperback]

Jean Teulé
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Gallic Books; 1st edition edition (1 Nov 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1906040397
  • ISBN-13: 978-1906040390
  • Product Dimensions: 17.4 x 10.6 x 1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 365,107 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Jean Teulé
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Product Description

Review

'This gripping and gory short novel revisits one of French history's stranger episodes. Sticking closely to the known facts, Jean Teulé's novelisation offers no easy explanation for what happened but the transformation from rural idyll to hell on earth is terrifyingly convincing.' --Financial Times

France's most esoteric comic novelist has taken a grisly portion of the country's history and served it up as a grim, memorable dish. In the crackling summer of 1870, a minor aristocrat went into his local village fair in Dordogne. The wine- fuelled mob, nervous over the Franco-Prussian war, turned on him, tortured him, roasted him and ate him. It's true. It's horrible. It's an extraordinary tale. --The Independent on Sunday

Product Description

A true story. Tuesday 16 August 1870, Alain de Money, makes his way to the village fair. He plans to buy a heifer for a needy neighbour and find a roofer to repair the roof of the barn of a poor acquaintance. He arrives at two o'clock. Two hours later, the crowd has gone crazy; they have lynched, tortured, burned and eaten him. How could such a horror be possible? With frightening precision, Jean Teulé reconstructs each step of one of the most shameful stories in the history of nineteenth-century France.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Simon Savidge Reads TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
`Eat Him If You Like' fictionalises the true events which took place on the 16th of August 1870 when the town of Hautefaye collectively seemed to lose their minds. The village was having one of its regular fairs when there was some misunderstanding between the locals and Alain de Moneys and his cousin the Vicomte Camille Maillard Lafaye who was reported to have said something negative about the current state of the war between France and Prussia. Camille managed to flee the scene and so the villagers turned on Alain and subjected him to horrific torture before burning him alive and eating him.

Here you may think I have given too much away, but the blurb says all this on the back of the book, and it is the situation, how it happened and the outcome that made me want to read about it; and what happens after the horrific event is indeed grimly fascinating (along with the fact that I thought Jean Teulé's novel `The Suicide Shop' was a brilliant black comedy and had wanted to read more by him).

In fact `grimly fascinating' really sums up `Eat Him If You Like' because it is possibly one of the goriest tales I have read in some time. I have quite a hardened stomach and there were two moments in this novella that I both squirmed and actually felt slightly unwell. Yet these events actually happened, so this isn't an author using the horrific to shock, he uses it to make a point and to really show just how awful the events happened and how a simple misunderstanding can become something so horrendous and how people will pin blame and follower a leader without thinking things through.

As well as being horrific this novel is also rather moving, and indeed in parts very funny - I had this same reaction to `The Suicide Shop' if I remember rightly. Teulé gets us into the head of Alain ery quickly, we learn he is a sweet, possibly a little too innocent, young man who was doing much for his local community and helping the villagers and indeed village of Hautefaye in many ways. Hence why what follows is made all the more shocking and saddening as people he helped seem to forget all that in favour of the heightened drama. Teulé also uses this to humorous effect, for example when Alain is being dragged through the street with people throwing rocks at his head and screaming he is an evil Prussian, Teulé writes that his victim of circumstance dreamily ponders that he `had never had a nickname before, but it seemed like this one was sticking.' Well, it made me laugh anyway.

Despite the initial funny moments overall Teulé manages to build up a sense of Alain as a person, the heightened political tensions of the time and the villagers and the atmosphere of a village in the middle of nowhere. As he does this he builds a real sense of impending dread and doom before suddenly the true horrors are unleashed. This, as I mention before, is all done for a reason, as by the end I found myself incredibly moved by the unfairness of Alain's tale and circumstance, shocked people could actually have done such a thing and a sense of the loss of a village who have to deal with what they have done in what was an incredibly long moment of madness.

`Eat Him If You Like' is a beguilingly small book for all it achieves. If you are rather faint hearted then it might not be advisable to pick this up, however if you are made of sterner stuff this is a novella I would certainly recommend it makes you feel uncomfortable for all the right reasons, in fact I found myself watching the news and thinking `have we actually moved on from this mentality in some ways, isn't this very thing still happening now?' A thought provoking novella and one that shows a superb author keen to tell a tale that we can learn from.
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HORROR 15 May 2012
By ABC
Format:Paperback
It is difficult to recommend this book because the tale (true) is so horrific and the telling of it is so graphic. However, at only 105 pages, it is more like a short story and well worth reading if you have the stomach for it.

Its beginning is sunny enough but all too soon the tale turns very dark indeed and really there is no let up until the end of the story. This is set in a small French town in 1870 during a time of deprivations of one sort or another. How the ordinary townsfolk could turn their prejudices onto a gentle and well-respected neighbour with such violence will never be fully understood although I don't suppose, given the right circumstances in any society, a mob baying for blood is ever too far away.
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