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On ne peut plus dormir tranquille quand on a une fois ouvert les yeux

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À Paris, au début des années 1960, le père de Bernard Appelbaum n'est pas revenu de déportation et sa mère s'est remariée avec un ami d'enfance, qui meurt dans un accident d'avion. Bernard rencontre Robert Bober, assistant de F. Truffaut sur le tournage de Jules et Jim. Il est convié à y être figurant et emmène sa mère sur les lieux du tournage.

272 pages, Pocket Book

First published August 26, 2010

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Robert Bober

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Ellen.
1,127 reviews10 followers
May 22, 2012
3.5 stars

There was nothing significantly wrong with this book, but the fact that the plot jumped around made it hard to follow at times. An interesting plot point would surface, only to be abandoned two chapters later. Characters mentioned in the beginning would seemingly drop out of the main character's life (which is pretty realistic), and when mentioned again toward the end, it would be difficult to remember why they were important. Sometimes I wondered why some characters were even necessary.
Despite all this, the last chapter redeemed the book in my eyes. Throughout the story, Bernard is searching for his father. In the midst of everything else, this plot holds strong. The way the book resolves this was the best part of the story IMO
Profile Image for Bridget.
1,380 reviews2 followers
January 16, 2014
I was not a fan of this book. Granted, I needed to get it read for book club and procrastinated, so it's possible that I didn't give it due time and effort. Given that, I thought the book would be much more mysterious or adventurous. The story was non-linear, with little stories dispersed throughout that I couldn't make a connection between. There were too many references I didn't get - to movies, to works of art, to musicians, to streets in Paris. I love reading historical books that make me want to learn more about the era, but I couldn't connect with this book enough to want that. I finished and thought, "What just happened? Is that all?" Maybe it was the translation?? Anyway, bleh to this book.
273 reviews
July 14, 2012
I wasn't thrilled with the disorganized plot of a man in the early 60's trying to find the story behind his father's disappearance during WWII. This is the 3rd translation I've read recently. Maybe I need a break. What was interesting was the culture detailed during that time in post-war France.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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