New York Times Book Review 6-30-74
"Lit with a flash of frighteningly lucid prophecy, and seen to be nothing less than the doom of the human race. . . . But what is oddest of all about Rigadoon, and what distinguishes it from Cline's other work, is its sense of peace, almost of consummation, at the sight of a Europe in rubble and flames."
Times Literary Supplement
"Cline's explosive language and style is the very sign of his experience: its full impact explodes, as if by delayed reaction, before the eyes, and in the consciousness, of author, narrator, and reader alike."
Nation 2-1-75
"More than most modern authors, [Cline is] able to plunge directly into the burning center, where Europe, in rage and anguish, is tearing itself apart. In so doing, he captures the heat and energy of he final holocaust better than almost anyone."
Washington Post Book World 6-2-74
"Cline quite deliberately makes us feel the inescapable, mind-rotting horror of endless chaos, the fact of war as Americans have never known it."
Book Description
last & most compassionate novel, tr Ralph Manheim
Language Notes
Text: English (translation)
Original Language: French
Rigadoon FROM THE PUBLISHER
Completed the day before his death in 1961, Rigadoon, the most compassionate of Celine's novels, explores the ravages of war and its aftermath. Often comic and always angry, the first-person autobiographical narrator, with his wife and their cat in tow, takes the reader with him on his flight from Paris to Denmark after finding himself on the losing side of World War II. The train rides that encompass the novel are filled with madness and mercy, as Celine, a physician, aids refugees while ignoring his own medical needs.