Talk:The Kindly Ones (Littell novel)

Most Prestigious
"the most prestigious" should not be used to describe the prix goncourt. It is a point of view. It is the same reason "prestigious" is not used to describe the Grammy Awards, the Nobel Prize, or the American Ivy League schools. C5mjohn 14:13, 8 June 2007 (UTC)

I would respectfully disagree. While there are many literary prizes awarded in France, it is uniformly recognised that the Prix Goncourt is the most prestigious of them, to the point that it is tacitly agreed that no other French literary prize is awarded to a work which wins the Goncourt since it is conceded that any other prize would be superfluous.--Partnerfrance (talk) 18:54, 28 April 2010 (UTC)

WikiProject class rating
This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as stub, and the rating on other projects was brought up to Stub class. BetacommandBot 13:40, 9 November 2007 (UTC)

Corrections and work to be done
I have corrected a couple of the glaring mistakes. Aue engages in homosexual relationships already the section Allemande I & II. But the entry needs a lot of work. If I find time I will try and add some references.--Joel Mc (talk) 16:51, 18 November 2007 (UTC)

I have now done more extensive work. Perhaps putting in all the characters was unnecessary at this stage but the list had already been started and rather than deleting....I have tried to link to references in English, but there are not a lot yet. The novel will be published in English in 2008. I am sure that there are changes to be made and if you have hesitations about editing you can email me (joelmc.wiki@gmail.com) with your suggestions and I will try and put them up.Joel Mc (talk) 14:04, 13 December 2007 (UTC)

Moving page
I have tried to revert to the orginal title, Les Bienveillantes, but don't seem to know how to do it. Even if it is consistent with WP policy, it would have been good to discuss moving it before taking such an action. The Kindly Ones doesn't mean much in English. As far as I know, it is never used to refer to to the Eumenides, which is the name used in the English title of the Greek tragedy. Secondly, we don't know what actual title Littell will use in English and rather than making another move it might have been better to leave it until the book comes out this year in English. True there is little harm done, specially with the redirect, still the title klangs in the ears of this English speaker. But maybe that is what Littell wants and we will find that a second move will be unnecessary.Joel Mc (talk) 09:18, 4 February 2008 (UTC)


 * The move was wrong and the user appears not to have understood the policy he was using as a reason for the move. The book is known in English under the name Les Bienveillantes and hasn't been translated. Home made translations of titles is very far from the policy of using English on English Wikipedia. JdeJ (talk) 10:37, 10 February 2008 (UTC)

Ukraine pogroms
This image has been deleted ot of the article, although the author describes these incidents in several pages. --Alex1011 (talk) 10:58, 7 March 2008 (UTC)

Moving Page (2)
Apparently the recent move was made without looking at the discussion above. It was intended to move the page when the English translation appeared (it is now scheduled for March 2009), or at least when the reviews of the English edition began to appear. However, since JL decided to translate the title as The Kindly Ones, it is probably good to just leave well enough alone. --Joel Mc (talk) 10:04, 21 October 2008 (UTC)

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Leon Degrelle
Is it correct that Degrelle was the major influence for the Aue character? Dysmorodrepanis (talk) 09:52, 14 May 2009 (UTC)
 * No. Evenfiel (talk) 12:35, 14 May 2009 (UTC)

Good Article review
Hello everyone. If you have this page on your watchlist, please take note that I'll be reviewing the article during the next few days for Good Article status, so now's the time for any last-minute cleanup. I realize there's been a long wait for the review, so I'll try to get it done as quickly as possible. Skoal. Phoenix and Winslow (talk) 18:42, 2 December 2009 (UTC)
 * My preliminary review is finished. It can be found here. The article needs some work before GA status can be awarded. Phoenix and Winslow (talk) 22:09, 4 December 2009 (UTC)

fix'd nao
However, is this picture of Kosmodemyanskaya avaible? I guess it would be the most important illustation here. --83.13.135.170 (talk) 07:55, 12 December 2009 (UTC)

pornographer of violence
An accusation against Littell that he was a "pornographer of violence" was linked to an article on (literal) violent pornography!! Is this someone's idea of a joke? Valkotukka (talk) 12:03, 6 April 2010 (UTC)

Explaination
Eichmann was just one of hundreds Obersturmbannfuhrers serving under Reichsfuhrer Himmler (just like Aue), and even at Wannsee he was only an assistant to Heydrich (and he was pretty shy and unconfortable there, from the records, or at least according to the docudrama). He may be (in)famous, but it's just like the infamy of Mengele, who was only one of hundreds camp doctors, and not even ever a chief doctor at Auschwitz (Wirths was, and he's in the book, but very frew people even heard about Wirths, or his own superiors higher up). The chief reason why he is famous is of course that he was kidnapped and hanged by the Israelis. He's also known as a "small cog" "only following orders" and actually sparked the phrase and concept of banality of evil, from his trial. If there were comparisons made between Aue and Eichmann, they belong elsewhere.

This picture seriously distracts from the reception section while adding nothing special at all, and the execution picture illustrates the next part of the book. --Niemti (talk) 16:14, 22 November 2012 (UTC)


 * It hardly matters if he was just one of hundreds. He's an important character in the novel and one of the most famous nazis. Eichmann was already famous before he was caught. During the Nuremberg trials, he was seen as one of the most important figures behind the Holocaust. Hannah Arendt's book, Eichmann in Jerusalem, only added to his fame. There are no comparisons being made between Aue and Eichmann. That sentence only mentions three famous nazis that Aue meets.


 * The picture that doesn't add much to the article is the one with the German soldier, but I'm ok with it in case you really want it there. I think we can have both pictures. As for the execution picture, I don't have a problem with it. I only moved it up because it was too close to the next picture. Evenfiel (talk)

Eichmann was a Nazi equivalent of a mid-level grey apparatchik: he was a functionary, he was never in real position of power, he was "only following orders" (also literally), he has never even killed anyone personally (only in the sensationalist movie he did) - while even the book's Aue did kill (murder) people personally, he was not even charismatic (at all). If you watch The Conspiracy note a stark difference between him and his boss Heydrich.

But anyway: yes, Aue was compared to Eichmann, like here: "Like Forrest Gump, he meets historical figures, in this case infamous Nazis, among them Adolf Eichmann, Albert Speer, Rudolf Hess and, in the book’s final pages, Hitler himself. All in all he personifies Hannah Arendt’s famous notion — she applied it to Eichmann — of the “banality of evil.”" (Eichmann is named randomly, among Hess and Speer, only to make a later comparison between him and Aue).

Or here: "[http://www.alluvium-journal.org/2012/10/01/the-third-reich-in-contemporary-fiction/ It is also a claim that recalls Hannah Arendt’s judgment on Adolf Eichmann: ‘he was genuinely incapable of uttering a single sentence that was not a cliché’ (Arendt 48). For Arendt, these linguistic limitations were ‘closely connected with an inability to think, namely, to think from the standpoint of somebody else’ (Arendt 49) – one definition, we might say, of what a novel can do. It is notable that among the many prominent Nazis to appear in The Kindly Ones (a list which includes Himmler, Speer and finally Hitler himself) it is Eichmann who receives the most extensive treatment. In a novel much concerned with twins, Aue and Eichmann form a contrasting pair: the exemplary ‘middle manager’ versus the intellectual (Littell 570). Whereas Eichmann was famously criticized by Arendt for his ‘sheer thoughtlessness’ (Arendt 287), Aue is told by his closest friend: ‘“you think too much. It’s bad for you”’ (Littell 142). While Arendt thought Eichmann suffered from a ‘lack of imagination’ (Arendt 287), Aue is a perpetual fantasist. Indeed, The Kindly Ones is a highly unstable text – combining sexual reverie, bureaucratic overload, horrific imagery and absurd humour in immense, claustrophobic paragraphs. For over 900 pages, it moves with the slow, crushing momentum of a tank. Like the killings it describes, The Kindly Ones is both bewildering and brutally efficient.]"

And so on. Eichmann is clearly notable for the book, but for all the different reasons (that you were not aware of). Aue was variably said to be similar to Eichmann or to be an anti-Eichmann (I think the latter is more true, that is I agree with Richard Martin's evaluation). There's also a multitude of other sources, about various aspects, that can be used to overally rewrite his character section of this (not-so) Good Article.

Actually a battle-fatigued German soldier adds, bcause it illustrates the Stalingrad chapter of the book ("the midst of the chaos, violence, and starvation", even as it was actually taken well before the worst of it) and what's most important - it's not intruding into another section of the article, dirtracting from the completely unrelated content.

The other execution picture I've seen it attributed as taken at Belarus by Oskar Dirlewanger's penal unit within the SS and the men who are shot as captured partisans (or alleged partisans; Dirlewanger also killed thousands of Jews, so maybe they're Jews indeed, or even just Jewish partisans). I think it was even on the cover of one book about Dirlewanger and his merry band. (No, it was just a similar picture. But nevertheless.)

Anothe problem is a huge "further reading" section, which is just a long list of random articles. They should be used as references and the rest deleted. --Niemti (talk) 17:41, 22 November 2012 (UTC)


 * I have absolutely no idea why you're talking about a comparison between Aue and Eichmann. I'm talking about the wiki article. There is no comparison in that sentence. It only mentions three famous nazi figures that Aue met. Eichmann is one of them. I realized later on that your problem was the word "leaders", which I did remove. The sentence now reads Throughout the book Aue meets several famous Nazis, including Adolf Eichmann, Heinrich Himmler and Adolf Hitler. And please stop using your patronizing tone with me ((but for all the different reasons (that you were not aware of)).


 * There is nothing wrong with the Further Reading section. It's a list of articles that the user can read if s/he's interested in the subject. That's a common section in featured articles. Evenfiel (talk) 20:20, 22 November 2012 (UTC)


 * And there should be a comparison, because a comparison was made by multiple sources (the Maximilien Aue section itself is really poor, and full of original resaarch, with the only references there having been added by me - whole article is full of unsourced content, sometimes even incorrect, like with your mistaken belief they were not under Wehrmacht orders) and there should be no "further reading" (lowercase, we don't use Random Capitalization for Wikipedia articles and sections) because nobody is going to click them to read it (and if they wanted, there is Google). All the important info from these articles should be in Wikipedia, with the articles being in the references section and only serving as sources (for "futher reading" indeed, but also for verification), and if they have none they should be deleted. Remember, it's (supposedly) GA class article. It's not even like if these were books, it's just articles. And yes, this image still adds nothing valuable to the article and still distracts from the reception section. --Niemti (talk) 20:47, 22 November 2012 (UTC)


 * Gosh, if you want to add a comparison, go ahead and do it! I'm not stopping you. I never said it was wrong to add a comparison.


 * Here is a featured article about a Candide that uses the Further reading section just the way it is used here. Actually, there are two books in that section. There are also a few relevant academic articles and all the remaining relevant reviews that were published in English.


 * About the Einsaztgruppen, you should go back to the wiki article you tried to use against me and read it again. Nowhere it says that they were under orders of the Wehrmacht, but that they were in close cooperation. I'll quote it for you: Each Einsatzgruppe was led by SD, Gestapo and Kripo officers, and its members included recruits from the Orpo, the Waffen-SS, and local volunteers, such as militia groups. Each death squad followed the Wehrmacht Heer (German Army) as it advanced eastwards through Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. During the course of their operations, the Einsatzgruppen commanders were authorized to request, and did receive, assistance from the Wehrmacht. Heydrich acted under orders from Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler who supplied security forces on an "as needed" basis to the local SS and Police Leaders. They were different organizations. The Wehrmacht could not give order to the SS. Again, from that article: The Einsatzgruppen were formed under the direction of SS-Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich (deputy to Heinrich Himmler) and operated by the Schutzstaffel (SS) before and during World War II. From September 1939 forward the SS-Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA – Reich Main Security Office)[4] had overall command of the Einsatzgruppen.


 * What Littell does is to make the picture unclear by saying that the Wehrmacht worked too closely with the Einsaztgruppen. The following passage is singular in that respect: “I don’t understand. Who should we take our orders from, in the end? From Reichenau or Jeckeln? And where is Brigadeführer Rasch?”—“I don’t know, Sturmbannführer.”. I suggest changing "attached" to "worked closely with", "cooperated" or something like that.


 * As for the sentence the Sixth Army, the AOK 6, to which we were attached, Littell originally used the verb "rattacher", auquel nous étions rattachés, which is usually translated as "linked", "connected" or "associated". By translating it to "attached", it took away the double entendre in Littell original text.


 * Unfortunately, we'll have to disagree about the image. Evenfiel (talk) 01:29, 23 November 2012 (UTC)

Also about Eichmann in the book (where Aue compares himself):

If I have described these meetings with Eichmann at such length, it’s not because I remember them better than the others: but this little Obersturmbannführer, in the meantime, has become a kind of celebrity, and I thought that my memories, shedding light on his character, might interest the public. A lot of stupid things have been written about him: he was certainly not the enemy of mankind described at Nuremberg (since he wasn’t there, it was easy to blame everything on him, especially since the judges didn’t understand much about how our services functioned); nor was he an incarnation of banal evil, a soulless, faceless robot, as some sought to present him after his trial. He was a very talented bureaucrat, extremely competent at his functions, with a certain stature and a considerable sense of personal initiative, but solely within the framework of clearly circumscribed tasks: in a position of responsibility, where he would have had to make decisions, in the place of his Amtschef Müller, for example, he would have been lost; but as a middle manager, he would have been the pride of any European firm. I never perceived that he nourished a particular hatred of the Jews: he had simply built his career on them, they had become not just his specialty but, in a way, his stock in trade; later on, when they tried to take it away from him, he defended it jealously, which is understandable. But he could just as easily have done something else, and when he told his judges that he thought the extermination of the Jews was a mistake, we can believe him; many people, in the RSHA and especially in the SD, thought similarly—I’ve already shown this—but once the decision was made, it had to be seen through to the end, he was very aware of that; what’s more, his career depended on it. Of course he wasn’t the kind of person I liked to see frequently, his ability to think on his own was extremely limited, and when I returned to my place, that night, I wondered why I had been so expansive, why I had fallen so easily into that familial, sentimental atmosphere that is usually so repugnant to me. Maybe I too had some need to feel I belonged to something. His interest was clear; I was a potential ally in a higher sphere to which he would normally have had no access.

--Niemti (talk) 21:25, 22 November 2012 (UTC)

Orders from the 6th Army / Wehrmacht in general
So I just consulted the book. Here go the relevant parts:

The next morning, Standartenführer Blobel, our commander, gathered his Leiters together to go to HQ. The Leiter III, my immediate superior, wanted to type up a report, so he sent me in his place. The headquarters of the Sixth Army, the AOK 6, to which we were attached, had occupied a large Austro-Hungarian building, its façade gaily painted orange, enhanced with columns and stucco decorations, and riddled with shrapnel. An Oberst, who seemed to know Blobel well, received us: “The Generalfeldmarschall is working outdoors. Follow me.” He led us toward a vast park that stretched down from the building to a bend in the Bug, down below. Near a solitary tree, a man in swimming trunks was walking with long strides, surrounded by a buzzing cloud of officers, their uniforms drenched in sweat. He turned toward us: “Ah, Blobel! Hello, gentlemen.” We saluted him: he was Generalfeldmarschall von Reichenau, the commander in chief of the army. His hairy chest, thrust forward, radiated vigor; embedded in the fat that, despite his athletic build, drowned out the Prussian fineness of his traits, his famous monocle gleamed in the sun, incongruous, almost ridiculous. Without stopping his precise and meticulous instructions he continued his jerky movements to and fro; we had to follow him, which was a little disconcerting; I bumped into a Major and didn’t grasp much. Then he stood still to dismiss us. “Oh yes! One other thing. For the Jews, five guns are too much, you don’t have enough men. Two guns per condemned man will be enough. As for the Bolsheviks, we’ll see how many there are. If they’re women you can use a full squad.” Blobel saluted: “Zu Befehl, Herr Generalfeldmarschall.” Von Reichenau clicked his bare heels and raised his arm: “Heil Hitler!”—“Heil Hitler,” we all replied in chorus before beating a retreat.

Sturmbannführer Dr. Kehrig, my superior, greeted my report sullenly. “Is that all?”—“I didn’t hear everything, Sturmbannführer.” He made a face and fiddled distractedly with his papers. “I don’t understand. Who should we take our orders from, in the end? From Reichenau or Jeckeln? And where is Brigadeführer Rasch?”—“I don’t know, Sturmbannführer.”—“You don’t know much, Obersturmführer. Dismissed.”

(...)

I must not have been the only one asking questions. A mute but profound uncertainty was pervading the ranks of the Wehrmacht. Cooperation with the SS was still excellent, but the Great Action had provoked anxious stirrings. A new order of the day by von Reichenau was beginning to circulate, a raw, harsh text, a brutal disclaimer of Rasch’s conclusions. It described the men’s doubts as vague ideas about the Bolshevik system. The soldier in the territories of the East is not only a fighter according to the rules of the art of warfare, he wrote, but also the bearer of a pitiless völkisch ideology and the avenger of all the bestialities inflicted on the German and ethnically related nations. Therefore, the soldier must have a full understanding of the necessity for harsh but just countermeasures against Jewish subhumanity. Human pity had to be banished: offering a traveling Slav, possibly a Bolshevik agent, something to eat was pure thoughtlessness, a mistaken humanitarian act. The cities would be destroyed, the partisans annihilated along with the uncommitted. These ideas, of course, didn’t all come from von Reichenau; the Reichsführer must have suggested a few passages to him, but the main point was that this order worked correctly toward the Führer, along his lines and toward his aims, to use the fine expression of an obscure employee of the Prussian Ministry of Agriculture, and so it was hardly surprising that the Führer was delighted with it, that he caused it to be distributed as an example to all the armies in the East. But I doubted if it was enough to set people’s minds at rest. National Socialism was a complete, total philosophy, a Weltanschauung, as we said; each person had to be able to find his place within it; there had to be room for all. But now, it was as if an opening had been forced into this whole, and all the destinies of National Socialism had been driven into it, on a one-way path of no return, which everyone had to follow until the end.

(...)

There was some agitation on the ground floor: groups of men were milling in the corners, whispering agitatedly. I caught a Scharführer by the sleeve: “What’s happening?”—“I don’t know, Obersturmführer. I think there’s a problem with the Standartenführer.”—“Where are the officers?” He pointed to a stairway that led to our quarters. On the way up, I met Kehrig, who was muttering as he came down, “This is insane, just insane.”—“What’s happening?” I asked him. He glanced at me gloomily and said, “How do you expect to work in such conditions?” He continued on his way. I climbed up a few more steps and heard a shot, the sound of broken glass, some shouts. On the landing in front of the open door of Blobel’s bedroom, two officers from the Wehrmacht were pacing furiously back and forth in front of Kurt Hans. “What’s happening?” I asked Hans. He gestured toward the room with his chin, his hands clenched behind his back. I went in. Blobel, sitting on his bed, wearing his boots but no jacket, was waving a pistol around; Callsen was standing next to him and trying without grasping his arm to direct the pistol toward the wall; a window pane had shattered; on the floor, I noticed a bottle of schnapps. Blobel was livid and spluttering incoherent words. Häfner came in behind me: “What’s happening?”—“I don’t know, it seems the Standartenführer is having a fit.”—“He’s gone nuts, you mean.” Callsen turned around: “Ah, Obersturmführer. Go ask the gentlemen from the Wehrmacht to excuse us and come back a little later, all right?” I stepped back and bumped into Hans, who had made up his mind to come in. “August, go find a doctor,” Callsen said to Häfner. Blobel was bawling: “It’s not possible, it’s not possible, they’re sick, I’m going to kill them.” The two officers from the Wehrmacht hovered in the hallway, rigid, pale. “Meine Herren…,” I began. Häfner pushed me aside and ran down the stairs. The Hauptmann squeaked: “Your Kommandant has gone mad! He wanted to shoot at us.” I didn’t know what to say.

(...)

Von Radetzky appeared at the door: “What is this mess?” Kurt Hans spoke up: “The Generalfeldmarschall gave an order and the Standartenführer was ill, he wasn’t able to bear it. He wanted to shoot at the officers from the Wehrmacht.”

(...)

An hour later, the officers met in the main hall. Von Radetzky and Häfner had left with Blobel; he had started kicking when they put him into the Opel, Sperath had been forced to give him another shot while Häfner held him round the waist. Callsen began to speak: “Well, I think you’re all more or less up to date about the situation.” Vogt interrupted: “Could you perhaps go over it quickly?”—“If you like. This morning, the Generalfeldmarschall gave the order to undertake a retaliatory action for the ten German soldiers found mutilated in the fortress. He ordered us to execute one Jew for each person assassinated by the Bolsheviks; that is more than a thousand Jews. The Standartenführer received the order and that seems to have brought about a fit…”—“It’s also somewhat the army’s fault,” Kurt Hans said. “They should have sent someone with more tact than that Hauptmann. And transmitting an order of this importance through a Hauptmann is almost an insult.”—“We have to admit that this whole business reflects badly on the honor of the SS,” Vogt commented.

--Niemti (talk) 18:36, 22 November 2012 (UTC)

"Further reading"

 * Bukiet, Melvin Jules (March 7, 2009). A Leering Look at the Holocaust. The Washington Post. Retrieved on 2010-09-24.
 * Gates, David (March 5, 2009). The Monster in the Mirror. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2010-09-24.
 * Golsan, Richard J., Suleiman, Susan R., Suite Française and Les Bienveillantes, Two Literary "Exceptions" : A Conversation, Contemporary French and Francophone Studies, vol. 12, no 3 (2008), p. 321–330
 * Grossman, Lev (Mar. 19, 2009). The Good Soldier. Time. Retrieved on 2009-04-25.
 * Hodes, Laura (March 4, 2009). Furious Responsibilities. The Forward. Retrieved on 2009-04-21.
 * Hussey, Andrew (February 27, 2009). The Kindly Ones, By Jonathan Littell, translated by Charlotte Mandell. The Independent. Retrieved on 2009-04-21.
 * Hussey, Andrew (December 11, 2006). Guilty pleasures. New Statesman. Retrieved on 2010-09-24.
 * Kemp, Peter (March 1, 2009). The Kindly Ones by Jonathan Littell. The Sunday Times. Retrieved on 2009-04-21.
 * Lasdun, James (February 28, 2009). The exoticism of evil. The Guardian. Retrieved on 2009-08-18.
 * Lemonier, Marc, Les Bienveillantes décryptées. Le Pré aux Clercs. (2007) ISBN 978-2-266-18164-8.
 * Littell, Jonathan, (November 13, 2006). Lettres de Jonathan Littell à ses traducteurs. Retrieved on 2009-04-24
 * Mandell, Charlotte, (March 14, 2009). Living Inside The Kindly Ones. Beatrice.com. Retrieved on 2009-04-24
 * Morrison, Donald (February 21, 2009). The Kindly Ones. Financial Times. Retrieved on 2009-04-21.
 * Razinsky, Liran, History, Excess and Testimony in Jonathan Littell’s Les Bienveillantes, French Forum, vol. 33, no 3 (Autumn 2008), p. 69–87
 * Razinsky, Liran (editor), Barjonet, Barjonet (Editor), Writing the Holocaust Today: Critical Perspectives on Jonathan Littell's The Kindly Ones. Rodopi. (2012) ISBN 978-9042035867
 * Moyn, Samuel (March 4, 2009). A Nazi Zelig: Jonathan Littell's The Kindly Ones. The Nation. Retrieved on 2009-04-21.
 * Schuessler, Jennifer (March 21, 2009). Writing with the Devil. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2010-09-24.
 * Suleiman, Susan Rubin, When the Perpetrator Becomes a Reliable Witness of the Holocaust : On Jonathan Littell's Les Bienveillantes, New German Critique, vol. 36, no 1 (2009), p. 1–19
 * Suleiman, Susan Rubin (March 15, 2009). Raising Hell. The Boston Globe. Retrieved on 2011-06-20.
 * Theweleit, Klaus, On the German Reaction to Jonathan Littell's Les Bienveillantes, New German Critique, vol. 36, no 1 (2009), p. 21–34

An useless collection of links. --Niemti (talk) 01:59, 4 March 2013 (UTC)


 * That was already discussed above. Just read the discussion again. There is nothing against a "Further reading" section. Plenty of featured articles have it. Evenfiel (talk) 18:31, 5 March 2013 (UTC)


 * They have when there are relevant books on the subject. --Niemti (talk) 18:34, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
 * In that list there are books and academic articles written about The Kindly Ones, as well as reviews by Holocaust and French literature specialists. I'll remove the less important links. Evenfiel (talk) 18:44, 5 March 2013 (UTC)


 * Then use them in the article, JUST AS I ALREADY DID WITH SOME. Now revert yourself or I'll report you (for breaking Wikipedia guideline and spamming with external links). --Niemti (talk) 19:00, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
 * I've trimmed it down. If you want, you can use them in the article, if not, just leave them there. Thanks. Evenfiel (talk) 19:04, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
 * No, if YOU want, you can use them. Now, it's spam, serving no purpose for th article, breaking Wikipedia guideline. And so you have to remove the spam. You're welcome. --Niemti (talk) 19:11, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
 * Please read about the "Further reading" section here: Further_reading. Also, you should add all references used by you to the "References" section. I had to add a few that were still in the "Further reading" section, but you should still add a few more. Evenfiel (talk) 19:18, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
 * "The following is a proposed Wikipedia policy, guideline, or process. The proposal may still be in development, under discussion, or in the process of gathering consensus for adoption." No. --Niemti (talk) 19:27, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
 * I have been away for sometime, but having started working on this piece in 2006, and am certainly opposed to deleting the whole "Further reading" section. Perhaps it had gotten a little long, but Evenfiel's cull works for me, the remaining list seems to be most useful to any reader who wants to further their knowledge.Joel Mc (talk) 19:15, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
 * Oh yeah? Whatever purpose might some list, compiled either at random or arbitrarily (I'm not sure what's worse), serve to any reader equipped with the arcane powers of an Internet search engine? It's a repository of external links by another name. Also. --Niemti (talk) 19:21, 5 March 2013 (UTC)

Also, "At the time, he had a pharaonic project of writing a 10-volume book, which he gave up after writing the first three. The seeds of The Kindly Ones are to be found in the future fourth volume. " What the hell does it mean? What books, what 4th volume? Is it some kind of really broken translation but it makes sense in the original French? --Niemti (talk) 19:29, 10 March 2013 (UTC)
 * If I remember it correctly, it was a 10-volume book about the Second World War, but I'll need to check. He wrote the first 3 volumes and used the ideas for the future 4th volume to start a completely new project, The Kindly Ones. Evenfiel (talk) 01:13, 13 March 2013 (UTC)

No mention of another award this book won?
The Bad Sex in Fiction Award: In such a long article, surely it's possible to make room for that somewhere? Robofish (talk) 16:12, 25 October 2013 (UTC)

Speculative mention of Mandelbrod
The unreferenced, speculative, statement: "His name might be inspired...." has now been reverted by two editors. If you disagree with the reverts, please discuss here before continuing. --Joel Mc (talk) 16:07, 17 December 2013 (UTC)