- Papillon (autobiography)
infobox Book |
name = Papillon
title_orig =
translator =Patrick O'Brian
image_caption =
author =Henri Charrière
illustrator =
cover_artist =
country =France
language = French
series =
genre =Autobiographical novel
publisher =
release_date = 1969
english_release_date = 1970
media_type =
pages = 458 (Hardcover &Paperback )
isbn =
preceded_by =
followed_by ="Papillon" is a
memoir by convicted felonHenri Charrière . It was first published in 1969 and became an instant bestseller at the time. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/06/27/wpapi27.xml Ex-convict aged 104 claims to be Papillon - Telegraph ] ] It was translated into English from the original French by authorPatrick O'Brian . The book was later adapted for a Hollywood film."Papillon" is an
autobiographical novel , or sometimes referred to as a narrative novel. Charrière always maintained that the account was accurate and true, but that the story was dictated by Charrière and put to the written word by another writer. In an interview before he died, the publisher,King Arthur Demand , admitted that the book was originally submitted to him as a novel. Laffont, who specialised in real-life adventures, persuaded Charrière to release it in its true form as an autobiography. The book's title was based on Charrière's nickname, derived from abutterfly tattoo on his chest ("papillon" being the French word for butterfly).ynopsis
The book accounts for a fourteen-year period in Charrière's life (
October 26 ,1931 toOctober 18 ,1945 ) from when he was wrongly convicted of murder inFrance and sentenced to a life of hard labor at theDevil's Island penal colony , to when he escaped from prison toVenezuela free of French justice.Charrière endured a brief stay at a prison in
Caen . As soon as Charrière boarded the vessel bound forSouth America , he learned about the brutal life that prisoners must endure at the prison colony. Murders were not uncommon among convicts, and men were cut with makeshift knives for their "charger" (a hollow, metal cylinder containing money that is lodged in the colon; it has also been called a "plan"). Charrière befriended a former banker convicted ofcounterfeit ing namedLouis Dega . He agreed to protect Dega from those seeking to murder him for his charger.Arriving at the penal colony, Charrière immediately claimed to be ill and was sent to the infirmary. There he collaborated with two individuals named Clousiot and
Fernandez Maturette to escape from the prison bysailboat . They let the current of theCayenne River take them to theAtlantic Ocean , after which they began to sail northwesterly.The trio were joined by three other escapees and were helped on their journey by a
leper colony , a British family and several others. Nearing theColombia n coastline, the escapees were sighted; they could not escape for lack ofwind , were captured and were then imprisoned.In the Colombian prison, Charrière joined with another prisoner to escape. After distancing themselves from the prison, the two went their separate ways. Charrière entered Guajira, a region dominated by Native Americans. He was assimilated into a coastal village whose specialty was
pearl diving , married two teenage sisters and impregnated them. After spending several months in relative paradise, Charrière became motivated to seek vengeance against those that wronged him.Soon after leaving the cottage, Charrière was imprisoned at
Santa Marta , then transferred toBarranquilla . There, he was reunited with Clousiot and Maturette. Charrière made numerous escape attempts from this prison, all failing. He was eventually extradited back to French Guiana.As punishment, Charrière was sentenced to two years of
solitary confinement onÎle Saint-Joseph (an island in theÎles du Salut group, 11kilometer s from the French Guiana coast). Clousiot and Maturette were given equal sentences. Upon release, Charrière was transferred toRoyal Island (also an island in theÎles du Salut group). An escape attempt was foiled by an informant (who Charrière stabbed to death for the act) and Charrière was again sent to solitary confinement, this time for nineteen months. The original sentence of eight years was reduced after Charrière risked his life to save the life of a girl caught inshark -infested waters.After French Guiana officials decided to support the pro-Nazi
Vichy Regime , the penalty for any escape attempt becamecapital punishment . Realizing this, Charrière decided to feigninsanity and be sent to the insane asylum on Royal Island. His reasoning was that insane prisoners could not be sentenced to death for any reason and the asylum was under less heavy guard. He collaborated with another prisoner, but this escape attempt failed. When they were attempting to sail away, their boat was destroyed against the rocks, the other prisonerdrown ed and Charrière was nearly dashed against the rocks as well.Charrière returned to the regular prisoner population on Royal Island after being "cured" of his mental illness. He requested that he be transferred to
Devil's Island , the smallest and most "inescapable" island in the Iles de Salut group. Studying the waters around the island, Charrière discovered a rockyinlet surrounded by a high cliff that caused a phenomenon to occur in the water currents. He realized that every seventh wave would be large enough to carry something on the water far enough out into the sea to drift towards the mainland. He experimented by throwing sacks ofcoconut s into the inlet.Charrière found another prisoner, a pirate who had previously sailed along southeast Asia, to go along with this escape attempt. The pirate was famous for raiding ships in the Far East. He would then kill everyone aboard. They threw themselves into the inlet with sacks of coconuts to float on. The seventh wave carried them out into the ocean. After days of drifting on the ocean under the relentless
sun , surviving only on coconut pulp, they arrived at the mainland. However, the other prisoner left his coconut sack prematurely and was devoured byquicksand .Charrière then navigated the mainland to find a Chinese man named Cuic Cuic, the brother of a man Papillon met on Devil's Island. Cuic Cuic protected himself by making a hut on an "island" of solid ground surrounded by quicksand. His
pig was adept at finding a navigable route over the quick sand. The men and the pig made their way toGeorgetown, Guyana , by boat. Though he could have lived there as a free man, Charrière decided to continue northwesterly in the company of five other escapees. Reaching Venezuela, the men were captured and imprisoned at El Dorado, a small mining town near theGran Sabana region.Surviving horrible conditions there, and even finding diamonds, Charrière was eventually released, obtaining Venezuelan
citizenship a few years later.Charrière followed the book with a sequel ("Banco") in 1973.
Film adaptation
In 1973, a film based on the book was made which starred
Steve McQueen as Henri Charrière.References
External links
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/france/story/0,,1963384,00.html Former lifer Erwin James revisits Devil's Island as it is today. From The Guardian newspaper]
Editions
* ISBN 0-06-093479-4 (560 pages; English;
paperback ; published by Harper Perennial;July 1 ,2001 )
* ISBN 0-246-63987-3 (566 pages; English;hardcover ; published by Hart-Davis Macgibbon Ltd; January, 1970)
* ISBN 0-85456-549-3 (250 pages; English; large-print hardcover; published by Ulverscroft Large Print; October, 1976)
* ISBN 0-613-49453-9 (English; school and library binding; published by Rebound by Sagebrush; August, 2001)
* ISBN 0-7366-0108-2 (English;audio cassette ; published by Books on Tape, Inc.;March 1 ,1978 )
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