Hailed by Jean Cocteau as a masterpiece, and by the Guardian as Bret
Easton Ellis's Less Than Zero, avant la lettre, this taut tale written
by a teenager in the form of a frank confession is a gem of early
twentieth century romanticism. Long unavailable in the U.S., it is here
presented in a sparkling new translation.
Set in Paris during the First World War, it tells the story of Francois,
the 16-year-old narrator, who falls in love with Marthe, an older,
married woman whose husband is off fighting at the front. What seems to
begin as a charming tale of puppy love quickly darkens, and they launch
into a steamy affair. In the tense environment of the wartime city,
their love takes on a desperation transcending their youthfulness.
And as the badly-kept secret of their relationship unfolds, scandal
descends, leading the story to a final, startling conclusion--and
causing the book itself to become a scandal when it was first published
in 1923, just before the author's death at the age of 20.