Kuwait Times

Story of Hitler’s rise wins France’s top book award

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Two books about the Nazis took France’s biggest literary prizes on Monday, with Eric Vuillard’s story of how German industry and finance backed Adolf Hitler winning the top Prix Goncourt. “L’ordre du jour” (in English “Agenda”) had been among the favorites for the Goncourt prize-the most prestigiou­s in the French-speaking world. Vuillard, 49, said he was taken aback on hearing he won for his elegant, 160-page book which charts how the financial support of German industrial­ists was crucial in Hitler’s push for power.

“One is always surprised, sometimes fatally,” he told reporters at the Paris restaurant where the winner was announced. Asked whether the book was a warning for our own populist times, the writer said he wanted to set out how the “elites slid into a situation where they compromise­d themselves”. His novelistic account of Hitler’s rise, which sticks doggedly to the facts, turns on a secret meeting in February 1933 between Hitler and the heads of Krupp, Siemens, Opel, IG Farben and other major industrial groups where they agreed to bankroll his election campaign.

As they left the room, Hermann Goering laughed, “These elections will be the last for 10 years and maybe for a century.” The Renaudot award, often seen as a consolatio­n prize for those not shortliste­d for the Goncourt, went to “The Disappeara­nce of Josef Mengele”, another book about the Nazis which walked the tightrope of historical fact. Journalist Olivier Guez spent years retracing the secret postHoloca­ust life of the SS doctor, notorious as the “Angel of Death” at the Auschwitz concentrat­ion camp for his often lethal experiment­s on prisoners.

Mediocrity of evil Mengele managed to escape to Argentina and even got a West German passport in his own name in the 1950s so he could return for a holiday in his hometown. “I wanted to understand what is left of a person after they have done that kind of evil,” Guez said after he won. “I wanted to know what Mengele’s life was like afterwards, whether he had been punished or not. I think in Europe today (with the rise of the far-right) we need to understand the extraordin­ary mediocrity of evil,” he added.

While Vuillard gets only 10 euros for winning the Goncourt, the prize almost guarantees a boost in sales of 450,000 copies or more, placing it instantly among the year’s top bestseller­s. Although his book was greatly admired, many critics had tipped Veronique Olmi to make history by becoming the second woman writer in a row to win the century-old prize. Her novel, “Bakhita”, based on another real-life story of a Sudanese slave girl who became a Catholic saint, is already a bestseller. —AFP

 ??  ?? French writer Eric Vuillard holds his novel after being awarded with the Prix Goncourt for ‘L’Ordre du Jour’ at the restaurant Drouant in Paris. — AFP
French writer Eric Vuillard holds his novel after being awarded with the Prix Goncourt for ‘L’Ordre du Jour’ at the restaurant Drouant in Paris. — AFP

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