The Moustache (French: La Moustache), or The Mustache in the United States,[1] is a 1986 novel by the French writer Emmanuel Carrère.[2]
Author | Emmanuel Carrère |
---|---|
Language | French |
Publisher | Éditions Gallimard |
Publication date | 1986 |
Publication place | France |
Pages | 182 |
Plot
editIn Paris, a man shaves off his moustache for the first time in ten years. He is baffled when his wife reacts by saying that he never had a moustache. His world begins to crumble when she denies the existence of several people he knows and says his father is dead.[1]
Reception
editPublishers Weekly called the book "a tense, piercing reminder that a fine and shifting line distinguishes fact from mirage" and "a keen example of how readers are necessary captives of a narrator's perspective, however skewed or surreal".[1]
Film adaptation
editThe novel is the basis for the 2005 film The Moustache, directed by Carrère and starring Vincent Lindon.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b c "The Mustache". Publishers Weekly. 1988. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
- ^ Ekstein, Nina (2013). "Irony in Emmanuel Carrère's 'La moustache'". The French Review. 86 (3): 497–506. doi:10.1353/tfr.2013.0424. JSTOR 23510842. S2CID 45077621.
- ^ "The Moustache". Cineuropa. Retrieved 18 June 2023.