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218 pages, Mass Market Paperback
First published January 1, 1968
In June 1942, a German officer approaches a young man and says to him: "Excuse me, sir, where is the Place de l'Étoile?" The young man points to the left side of his breast.Alas, the pun is untranslatable, since nobody speaks of the Parisian landmark as the "Place of the Star." But there is also something splendidly defiant about the bitter joke: if the young man is not Jewish, he is criticizing the German racial laws; if he is, he risks his life. This splendid defiance, so unlike the author's other novels, is the defining feature of this one.
The narrator, Raphaël Schlemilovitch, is a hero of hallucination. Around him, in delirious trajectories, a myriad lives which might be his own intersect on orbits of stirring fantasy. A thousand contradictory identities whirl in a verbal mania where the Jew is sometimes king, sometimes martyr, hiding his tragedy with buffoonery. So we see personages both real and fictional: Maurice Sachs and Otto Abetz, Lévy-Vend��me and the doctor Louis-Ferdinand Bardamu, Brasillach and Drieu la Rochelle, Marcel Proust and the killers of the French Gestapo, Captain Dreyfus and the Pétainist admirals, Freud, Rebecca, Hitler, Eva Braun, and countless others, like figures on a carousel spinning madly through space and time. But the place of the star, the closed book, is inscribed at the exact centre of the "capital of pain."