Des fleurs pour Algernon

mass market paperback, 311 pages

French language

Published Jan. 1, 2001 by J'Ai Lu.

ISBN:
978-2-290-00427-2
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(3 reviews)

Il s'appelle Charlie Gordon, c'est un simple d'esprit, un minable, employé aux plus basses besognes dans une usine. Algernon, elle, est une souris de laboratoire et le traitement du Professeur Nemur et du Docteur Strauss vient de décupler son intelligence. Les deux savants tentent alors d'appliquer leur découverte à Charlie avec l'assistance de la jeune psychologue Alice Kinnian. C'est bientôt l'extraordinaire éveil de l'intelligence de ce cerveau demeuré. Charlie découvre avec passion un monde dont il avait toujours été exclu, et l'amour qui ne tarde pas à naître entre Alice et lui achève de la métamorphoser. Mais un jour, les facultés supérieures de la souris Algernon déclinent. Puis elle meurt. Pour Charlie commence alors le drame atroce d'un homme qui peu à peu se sent retourner à l'état de bête.

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Flowers for Algernon - moving, deep and hard to categrorise.

The journal entries, which evolve in linguistic style with Charlie's capabilities, make it an Epistolary novel, but the rapid growth and change puts it more into the Bildungsroman, category. In some ways it resembles a rags-to-riches-to-rags format, echoes of the story of Faust and the concept of forbidden knowledge, and hints of the inescapable destiny which remind me of Arthurian Romance.

The way Charlie's relationships with his co-workers at the bakery, staff and students at the university and Alice change as he changes is important, and they too are changed - though in lesser amounts - as the sun is pulled less towards the earth than the earth to the sun.

Throughout there remains a central decent core to Charlie, with his aspiration to know and his wish to be good, which is very endearing and identifiable.

Review of 'Flowers for Algernon' on 'GoodReads'

Poignant, sad, and deeply insightful

I had been assigned a watered-down adaptation of this in Junior High, so I went into this with some knowledge of what the general arc would be. What I didn't expect is that I would be reading until the sun came up, bawling my eyes out, absolutely shaken.

From the very first page, I liked Charlie Gordon. He comes across as innocent and sweet, with good intentions and a very one-dimensional frame of reference to the world. There's a few moments where people ask Charlie things that made me chuckle, like his initial confusion at the Rorschach test, but his attitude is strangely endearing.

The prose in this book is phenomenal. The gradual narrative shift from crude writing to eloquent philosophical insight is kind of an amazing writing trick, and the development of Charlie's awareness is hypnotic to watch.

In a way, I was kind …