I would have simply bought books that say "relie" (I'm too lazy to put accent marks on anything today). Now you're telling me I should be wary of doing even that.
Yes, you should be wary as it refers to the way the pages are bound together (sewn or glued/stappled), not to the cover (which, unless it states "couverture rigide" or "couverture cartonnée" somewhere, is always assumed to be paperback when shopping in french stores).
Camus' La Peste doesn't exist in an American-style hardcover edition. It was published in Gallimard's blanche collection, which is a large paperback collection (of higher quality than what Americans are used to for paperbacks, though).
Actually, you might stop looking for in-print American-style hardcover editions of virtually everything (literature, at least) as this simply doesn't exist for the mass market in French publishing. Mail-order bookclubs and such sometimes have them, but that's about it. Those industrial rigid covers that imitates old fashioned bindings are pretty much an anglo-saxon "thing". The French prefer more supple/lighter bindings.
If you want French classics in bound editions, they cost an arm and a leg. There's no "fair compromise" like Every Man's Library, that imitates the style of an upscale collection like La Pléiade with cheaper materials and craftmanship. In France it's the real deal like la Pléiade or the paperbacks and omnibuses.
Camus is available in La Pléiade, but it's his complete works in four volumes, not individual novels. Pléiade volumes are about 120 US$, IRRC.
Well, if Tim can post his planned reads for 2010, so can I.
- 11/01/2010 02:34:47 AM
904 Views
I doubt it quite the same ways that book seems to have for you
- 11/01/2010 03:43:37 AM
831 Views
- 11/01/2010 03:43:37 AM
831 Views
"Invitation to a Beheading" is the translated title *NM*
- 11/01/2010 03:55:06 AM
298 Views
Ah, I was wondering if it might be that one (obviously, I know very little Russian)
- 11/01/2010 04:04:14 AM
765 Views
I liked 1776.
- 11/01/2010 04:00:03 AM
834 Views
Re: I liked 1776 and try The Johnstown Flood. One of my best reads for last year *NM*
- 11/01/2010 03:33:24 PM
381 Views
The Plague might disappoint you.
- 11/01/2010 06:31:54 AM
751 Views
I was suspecting that: I studied some other Camus in school, but not that one.
- 11/01/2010 09:02:04 AM
771 Views
Well, then I'd have to buy it in French, and that gets me back to my old problem:
- 11/01/2010 01:42:35 PM
675 Views
Y'a pas de bonnes bibliothèques avec une section "Langues Étrangères" à New York?
- 11/01/2010 02:11:33 PM
727 Views
I'm too lazy to respond in French.
- 11/01/2010 02:37:41 PM
787 Views
Looks like you win. Can't find it on fnac.com either.
- 11/01/2010 02:55:10 PM
834 Views
I just can't justify buying a book I would want to keep in paperback.
- 11/01/2010 03:53:06 PM
773 Views
I would have thought "it's not available in hardback" was a good justification... *NM*
- 11/01/2010 03:55:56 PM
342 Views
Not for a book that I am sure is in hardcover somewhere...
- 11/01/2010 03:59:08 PM
744 Views
Are you sure it's in hardcover somewhere? *NM*
- 11/01/2010 04:00:54 PM
356 Views
It's a classic. How could it not be?
- 11/01/2010 04:03:07 PM
700 Views
Why would one do a new edition of a book that old - and that short - in hardcover?
- 11/01/2010 05:00:04 PM
778 Views
Because it's a classic.
- 11/01/2010 05:06:51 PM
696 Views
Book culture is different in France.
- 12/01/2010 07:06:17 PM
862 Views
That's so sad!
- 12/01/2010 11:27:37 PM
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Can you let me know what you think of 1776?
- 11/01/2010 09:13:58 AM
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Oh, and regarding another of your points
- 11/01/2010 02:49:26 PM
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Re: Well, if Tim can post his planned reads for 2010, so can I.
- 11/01/2010 11:32:53 AM
793 Views
I have a lot more on my "to read one day" list, but I don't want to read them all in one year.
- 11/01/2010 01:46:59 PM
743 Views
- 11/01/2010 01:46:59 PM
743 Views
I assumed you would have... I just didn't have anything more interesting to say
*NM*
- 11/01/2010 02:59:30 PM
358 Views
*NM*
- 11/01/2010 02:59:30 PM
358 Views

*NM*