Walter J. Higgins has all the right requirements to be admitted into the local country club, but when he is denied membership, his childhood wounds and painful secrets haunt him again, and he seeks to alleviate his suffering through revenge
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Language Notes:
Text: English, French (translation)
From Publishers Weekly:
Curtis's translation from Simenon's novel is merely competent, yet readers will feel the impact of the French original, published in 1955. The story was obviously inspired by the gifted author's temporary residence in a Connecticut town, here called Williamson. As described in spare, poetic passages, events concern the manager of the local supermarket, Walter Higgins. A caring husband and father, proud of his family and the status he has achieved after a deprived childhood in a New Jersey slum, Higgins happily anticipates joining the country club. When the committee blackballs him, the snub is a terrible blow. Higgins's wife and their children give him loving support but he becomes obsessed by thoughts of revenge against those who play a game with secret rules against those who "don't count." At this critical time, an emergency takes Higgins to his old neighborhood and the novel to a dramatically different turn. Simenon's pitiless observations of snobbish cruelty and his compassion for outcasts provoke thoughts of the pecking order that exists in communities everywhere.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
- PublisherHarcourt Brace Jovanovich
- Publication date1988
- ISBN 10 0151694753
- ISBN 13 9780151694754
- BindingHardcover
- Edition number1
- Number of pages154
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Rating