Raymond Radiguet (1903–1923) was the eldest of seven children born to a poor cartoonist. He left school at fifteen and was soon contributing articles to newspapers and journals in Paris, where he became the protégé and lover of Jean Cocteau. Radiguet published poems, criticism, and a play, The Pelican, as well as a highly successful novel, The Devil in the Flesh, while leading a wild and increasingly self-destructive life. He died of typhoid, contracted from eating oysters. The manuscript of his second novel, Count d'Orgel's Ball, was prepared for posthumous publication by Cocteau. »

Jean Cocteau (1889–1963), poet, playwright, novelist, and film director, was one of the most influential figures in twentieth-century French artistic life, especially celebrated for his collaborations with such contemporaries as Picasso, Stravinsky, and Erik Satie. Among Cocteau's best-known works are the short novel Les Enfants terribles and three movies, The Blood of a Poet, Beauty and the Beast, and Orpheus. »

Count d'Orgel's Ball

By Raymond Radiguet
Translated from the French by Annapaola Cancogni
Preface by Jean Cocteau

Count d'Orgel is handsome, charming, and carefree, a model of cool aristocratic aplomb. His wife, the Countess, is beautiful and pure and loves her husband more than anything in the world. But from the moment the d'Orgels meet and befriend the clever young François de Séryeuse backstage at the circus, all three of these supremely civilized and witty people are caught up in an ever more intricate and seductive dance of deception and self-deception. At Count d'Orgel's masquerade ball, the real disguises are those of the human heart.

Completed just before Raymond Radiguet's death at the age of twenty, Count d'Orgel's Ball is a love story that is as disturbing as it is delicious.


Reviews

Raymond Radiguet's Count d'Orgel's Ball is a prototypically French novella: irreducibly classical, ruthlessly analytical, and so thoroughly disabused that it is hard to believe anyone so young could have written it. Never has grace been so curt, or tact so indecent, or psychology so diabolical. And yet, the tragedy of this young author's death shadows us on each and every page of this unforgivably short novel and reminds us that the word 'genius' is not inappropriate.
— André Aciman

[Count d'Orgel's Ball is] a perfectly chiselled diamond....It is frightening to see a child of twenty publish a book that cannot be written at that age.
— Jean Cocteau

Extraordinary assurance.... It partakes of the nature of a wager or an acrobatic feat. The result is virtually total success.
— André Gide


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Format: Paperback
Retail Price: $12.95
Price: $9.71 (25% off)


Mar 31, 2005
176 pages
ISBN: 1590171381
9781590171387
All Literature in Translation
NYRB Classics
Literature in French

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