Céline's masterpiece--colloquial, polemic, hyper realistic--boils over
with bitter humor and revulsion at society's idiocy and hypocrisy:
Journey to the End of the Night is a literary symphony of cruelty and
violence that hurtles through the improbable travels of the petit
bourgeois (and largely autobiographical) antihero, Bardamu: from the
trenches of WWI, to the African jungle, to New York, to the Ford Factory
in Detroit, and finally to life in Paris as a failed doctor. Ralph
Manheim's pitch-perfect translation captures Céline's savage energy, and
a dynamic afterword by William T. Vollmann presents a fresh, furiously
alive take on this astonishing novel.