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Category Archives: Germaine Krull
A photo-text is a phototext is a photo text. Or is it?
One of the funny things about “novels with pictures in them” is that, as I’ve said before, no one really agrees on what to call them, be it “illustrated novels”, or “iconotexts”, or “image-texts”, or “novels with photographs”, or “photography-embedded … Continue reading
Posted in Georges Simenon, Germaine Krull, Phototexts, Picture novels, Wright Morris
Tagged Alan Trachtenberg, fiction, Gerry Badger, Krull, Peter Turner, photo-text, photography, phototext, Simenon, Wright Morris
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The strange case of Simenon’s “phototext”
I have just read, with much pleasure, Simenon, Pierre Assouline’s remarkable 1992 biography of the creator of Inspector Maigret (Paris: Gallimard, 1996; at nearly 1,000 pages, the French edition is almost twice as long as either the US or UK … Continue reading