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The title refers to Leduc's best-known and most popular work, 'La Batarde', which tells the story of her life from her birth in 1912 to her experiences as a black marketeer after WWII and her struggles growing up as an illegitimate child with a demanding and often cruel mother. Since it was published in the 60's, the book has been in turn praised and ridiculed, and the subject of much discussion and commentary.
In 'Eloge', de Ceccatty details some of his experiences as a postgraduate philosophy student, falling in love with his mentor and experiencing the same impossibility and thwarted passion that Leduc felt for Maurice Sachs and Simone de Beauvoir. He also describes the extent of his fascination with the inscrutable author in a way that no ordinary biographer would. While the lives of de Ceccatty and Leduc are very different, the former manages to find parallels and points of contact and weave them into a loose yet coherent tangle of narratives, as candid and fresh as Violette could have written herself.
Even for someone who has never read Violette Leduc's work, this book is a fascinating story of obsession. For the (francophone) Leduc fan, it is an indispensable reference work bringing fresh insight to one of the world's most underrated authors.
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From her childhood trials in provincial France, to her affairs with her classmate Isabelle and her teacher Hermine, to her forced departure to Paris (for being found out with her affairs with the music teacher), to her discovery of Gabriel, to her abortions and black-market activity during World War II, the character that Violette portrays herself is no saint, but in refusing to give herself some pride she emerges as a martyr - of fate (being born with, as she says, an ugly nose). There is no question about her ugliness - even de Beauvoir is reputed to have made fun of her behind her back. Yet this woman must have had charisma, for designers gave her clothign to wear and show off on the streets. A contradiction, this woman was, and this quality of hers is very much shown to the reader in her autobiography.