Celine unreleased soon in bookstores?

Gallimard says he is ready to play his role of "exclusive publisher" of the works of the sulphurous writer whose manuscripts have resurfaced spectacularly, against the backdrop of legal combat between the beneficiaries and the one who secretly held the precious unpublished items.

Disappeared for 77 years and while many thought them lost forever, some 6,000 sheets were recovered at the end of July by the beneficiaries of Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1894-1961) and his widow, Lucette Destouches, who died in 2019: Me François Gibault, 89, penalist and writer close to “Madame Céline” and Véronique Robert-Chovin, 69, who was her dance student.

“This is an exceptional and unprecedented discovery,” explains Emile Brami, Céline's bookseller and biographer.

“Céline kept repeating that these manuscripts had been stolen.

This discovery proves that he was telling the truth ”.

“Lucette (Destouches) thought that texts would come out after her death,” recalls Véronique Robert-Chovin.

"But we didn't think it would come out so brutally and in such an incredible way."

Gallimard, "exclusive publisher of his literary work"

The existence of these documents was made public last week by

Le Monde

.

They had been kept for 15 years by Jean-Pierre Thibaudat (a pen name), drama critic and former

Liberation

journalist

, who claims to have seen them given by one of his readers, whose identity he did not reveal. .

“Céline attached such importance to these manuscripts”, recalls the historical editor of the writer, Antoine Gallimard, that “Gallimard must play the role which has always been his since 1951 (…): the exclusive publisher of his work literary.

"

"Missing link"

What do these documents contain?

In addition to a medieval-inspired legend,

The Will of King Krogold

, there are hundreds of leaves of two unpublished texts, one on the war of 14 and the other on Celine's London period, explain the few people to have saw the manuscripts.

Above all, they contain “the missing link” of

Casse-Pipe

, Céline's unfinished work, believes Emile Brami.

"He restores the original composition of the work, between

Death on Credit

 and

Voyages at the End of the Night

 ", adds David Alliot, editor and Celine expert.

Also among the leaves are an unpublished letter from the collaborating poet Robert Brasillach to Céline and documents used by the writer for his anti-Semitic pamphlets.

A complete alternate version of

Death on Credit

, one of Céline's main novels, is intended by the beneficiaries to be donated to the BNF which, in 2001, had acquired the first draft of

Voyage at the end of the night

.

The manuscripts require "a work of research and analysis to establish the most rigorous critical apparatus possible", recommend the two specialists.

“Editing is also a matter of patience.

The work must be carried out in a very scrupulous manner ", abounds Antoine Gallimard, who recalls the" priority given "to his publishing house" for the publication of all unpublished writings to come "of the author by his widow.

"Moral dilemma"

“My moral and intellectual dilemma is knowing which text to publish and in what form,” explains François Gibault.

"Whereas Céline had not done it during her lifetime, even before having them stolen".

The documents, stolen at the

Liberation

of Paris when the anti-Semitic writer and his wife had gone into exile, had an uncertain course before reaching the hands of Jean-Pierre Thibaudat, who handed over all the manuscripts to the Central Office for Combating Trafficking in Cultural Goods (OCBC) where he was called.

An investigation for "concealment of theft" was opened on February 17 by the Paris prosecutor following a complaint filed by the beneficiaries, the prosecutor told AFP.

The investigations were then entrusted to the OCBC.

Antoine Gallimard said for his part "very reassured" that the rights holders have recovered the manuscripts: "it is a real guarantee, as much for the conservation as for the publication and the development of the manuscripts".

The Gallimard house is ready "to the extent that the author's beneficiaries have informed us of their agreement", specifies Antoine Gallimard.

Me Gibault considers as for him “natural” to meet “the historical editor” of Céline first, possibly at the beginning of September.

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