March 1941. A converted cargo ship, the Paul-Lemerle, left Marseille on
a voyage to the Caribbean, fleeing Vichy France and the devastation of
the war. The ship was filled with immigrants from the East, exiled
Spanish Republicans, Jews, stateless persons and decadent artists. Among
them were Claude Lévi-Strauss, the painter Wifredo Lam, the writers Anna
Seghers and André Breton, and the Russian revolutionary Victor Serge.
Can we know the taste of pineapple from listening to travellers' tales?
asks Bosc in the follow-up to his bestselling debut. Can we ever feel
the sensation of history? Mixing the documentary techniques of history,
the imaginative leaps of fiction and the cool analysis of the essay,
Bosc takes us from Marseille to Casablanca to Martinique and on to New
York, to tell an evocative story of migration, cultural crisis and the
intellectual cost of the rise of fascism.