THE BASTARD
Violette Leduc
Dalkey Editions
2003 Original publication 1964
Translated by Derek Coltman
Ms. Hen decided to read this novel because she saw the film
VIOLETTE, and was intrigued by the story of Violette Leduc and her tumultuous
life. Ms. Hen read a collection of short stories by Simone De Beauviour
recently for the same reason.
THE BASTARD is about Violette Leduc and her experience
growing up as a bastard, an illegitimate child of a servant and the master’s
son. Leduc was born in 1907. Her mother is marked because she had a child out
of wedlock. She takes her child to live with her mother, and the grandmother
dotes on the child and spoils her until she dies. Leduc said that her
grandmother’s death frees her, since she could not hide in her apron ever
again.
Ms. Hen was enthralled by THE BASTARD. It’s not because there are dozens of
chickens and hens scattered all throughout the pages. It’s because the writing
has a dense beauty to it; the writing is heavy with words, and the descriptions
of things are so unique and desperate that Ms. Hen has never read anything
quite like it recently.
When she meets her stepfather, Violettte greets him, and he
brushes her aside, and she writes, “I turned to ice for thirty years.” Her mother
works hard when she marries the stepfather; she wanted to prove to him that she
could be a good wife. Violette is sent to boarding school.
Ms. Hen thought THE BASTARD might be considered to be like
Proust, but with some well written lesbian love scenes. She wrote, “A caress is
to a shudder what twilight is to a lightening flash.” Violette has a love
affair with her schoolmate Isabelle, and after that a teacher at the school,
Hermine. A student reports them and Violette is expelled, and
Hermine fired.
Violette has affairs with men as well. She has a long
relationship with Hermine, until one day Hermine leaves. Violette had worked at
a publishing company, but she quit, so she could stay at home. After Hermine
leaves Violette gets a job as a secretary and meets Gabriel, her old friend
again, and eventually marries him.
Throughout the book, Violette likes to pick flowers. She
picks them illegally, from parks, and houses, and she picks them in the forests
and the fields. Ms. Hen thinks this is because Violette is looking for her own
flower, and since her name is Violette.
Violette leaves Paris during World War II with Maurice Sachs
to go to the Normandy. This is when he encourages her to write, and she starts.
He gives her an exercise book and tells her to sit under an apple tree. She
becomes successful in the black market trade. She mails food from the country
where it is plentiful to Paris where people are hungry. This amazed Ms. Hen.
She didn’t think people could send food in the mail without it spoiling, But
there are ways for everything when people are hungry, for food and money.
Ms. Hen was dazzled by THE BASTARD. The book is a dense
read, Ms. Hen found that it took her a long time to finish it, since she had to
take breaks and come up for air every now and then. It isn’t often that a novel
gets under Ms. Hen’s skin and infects her, but this one did. She highly
recommends this novel, but to the reader, be prepared to experience Violette
Leduc’s heartbreak firsthand. THE BASTARD is not for the weak.
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