The Acacia

THE ACACIA

by Claude Simon

 

Award: Nobel Prize 1991

 

Nomination: LA Times finalist 1991

 

The reason I love novels is becoming intimately acquainted with the characters and expanding my mind to the infinite possibility of humankind. The Acacia is a tough one because no names are used, making the plot somewhat difficult to follow and leaving me scratching my head, asking what was the point?

 

I know Claude Simon won the Nobel Prize and I’m sure he fully deserved it, however, this may not have been one of his better representations. With multipage sentences and gauzy depictions of war, Simon seems to me the French answer to Faulkner. The novel weaves between the 1910s and the 1940s and I honestly couldn’t tell the difference between the time periods.

 

This isn’t to say I like my novels spoon-fed to me, but I rarely enjoy a war novel and one this challenging even less so. Glad I got an introduction to Simon’s work, though. Having fought in numerous wars, he undoubtedly has a firm grasp on his subject matter. 

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