Skip to main content
Sally Mara's Intimate Diary (French Literature)

Sally Mara's Intimate Diary (French Literature)

Current price: $16.95
Publication Date: September 26th, 2023
Publisher:
Dalkey Archive Press
ISBN:
9781628974607
Pages:
254
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

Sally Mara's Intimate Diary, dating from 1950, is exceptional; a salacious, black humorous and
meaningful story by the influential and erudite French novelist, Raymond Queneau. When 'Sally Mara'
begins her diary in January 1934, she is 17 years old and lives with her mother, older brother and
younger sister in south central Dublin. The everyday language is, of course, English, but she is writing
in 'newly-learned' French to impress her beloved and just departed French tutor, a professional polyglot
linguist. To impress him even more, she decides to learn Irish in order to write a novel of some kind in
Irish. However, the action throughout is determined by Sally's resolution to overcome her ignorance of
the mysteries of sex and reproduction.

The often sensual and dark humour of Sally Mara's Journal intime is founded on language and
languages, so this translation, while prioritizing clarity, aims to maintain 'Frenchness', tinged of course
with Dublinese. Surprisingly, for a French author, Irish words and phrases occur throughout; these are
not translated but, like some challenging French phrases, are supported by footnotes.
In 1949, when Raymond Queneau wrote Journal intime, published anonymously under the
pseudonym Sally Mara, he was, as always, greatly influenced by James Joyce and fascinated by the
limitations of language. He was also in need of the ready money provided by ditions du Scorpion,
publishers of erotic and violent pulp fiction, and of Journal intime.

About the Author

Raymond Queneau (1903-1976) is a key figure of mid twentieth century French literature. He wasa novelist, poet/songwriter, screenwriter, encyclopaedist, mathematician and painter. He was also aliterary innovator and theoretician, and cofounded L'Ouvroir de littérature potentielle (OuLiPo) afertile association of writers interested in constrained writing techniques. A senior editor with theprestigious publishers Gallimard, he also mentored aspiring writers (e.g. Marguerite Duras, PatrickModiano, Nobel 2104) and was a judge for the annual Prix Goncourt. He is especially well known forthe novel Zazie dans le Metro (1959) filmed by Louis Malle.James Gosling, translator of and commentator on this work has previously published appreciationsof Queneau's Sally Mara works (Raymond Queneau's Dubliners, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2019; Queneau philologue, Sally romancière, Éditions universitaires de Dijon, in press).