I Spit on Your Graves
First edition | |
Author | Vernon Sullivan (Boris Vian) |
---|---|
Original title | J'irai cracher sur vos tombes |
Translator | Boris Vian Milton Rosenthal |
Language | French |
Publisher | Éditions du Scorpion |
Publication date | 1946 |
Publication place | France |
Published in English | 1948 |
Pages | 190 |
I Spit on Your Graves (French: J'irai cracher sur vos tombes) is a 1946 crime novel by the French writer Boris Vian, published under the pseudonym Vernon Sullivan. The story is set in the United States and revolves around a sexual and racial conflict.
Reception
Chris Petit of The Guardian reviewed the book in 2001, and called it "dreamily convincing", elaborating: "A main inspiration would have been the slew of Hollywood movies that opened in Paris after the liberation, identified by the French as films noirs. I Spit... is straight noir, but also a work of liberated imagination after four years of Nazi occupation: heady, abandoned, fevered and lubricious. A fusion of prime US pulp and French sado-eroticism[.]"[1]
Adaptation
The book was adapted into a film with the same title directed by Michel Gast. Vian had already publicly denounced the adaptation while it was in production, but attended the premiere on 23 June 1959. A few minutes into the screening, he stood up and began to shout out his dissatisfaction with the film, and while doing so he collapsed and died of a sudden cardiac arrest on the way to the hospital.[2]
See also
- 1946 in literature
- 20th-century French literature
- Hardboiled
References
External links
- J’irai cracher sur vos tombes[dead link], complete text in HTML, public domain in Canada
- J'irai cracher sur vos tombes, complete text in PDF, public domain in Canada
- v
- t
- e
- I Spit on Your Graves (1946)
- Vercoquin and the Plankton (1946)
- Froth on the Daydream (1947)
- The Dead All Have the Same Skin (1947)
- Autumn in Peking (1947)
- The Red Grass (1950)
- Heartsnatcher (1953)
- Turmoil in the Swaths (1966)
- Je voudrais pas crever (1962)
- "Le Déserteur" (1954)
- "Fais-moi mal, Johnny" (1955)
- 15 chansons d'avant le déluge, suite et fin (1976 album)
- L'écume des jours (1986 opera)
- Mood Indigo (2013 film)
This article about a crime novel of the 1940s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. See guidelines for writing about novels. Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page. |
- v
- t
- e