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Papillon
Charriere

Pocket, 1983

average customer review:based on 83 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






"I don't belong here - I'm only visiting"

When Henri Charriere finds himself sent to a French prison colony for a crime he did not commit, he makes up his mind to go on a "cavale," literally to beat it and escape the custody of his captors. Like the butterfly (or in French "Papillon") which Charriere has tattooed to his chest, he will live his life in freedom or not at all. When a doctor questions him about his repeated escape attempts, Papillon's reply is matter-of-fact: "I don't belong here - I'm only visiting."

"Papillon" takes a while to get started, and Charriere's elusive and terse tone keeps one from feeling too close to the narrator. He tells you he didn't kill the man the police claim he did, but credits himself for not being a stool pigeon by telling them who did. So he's not exactly Dreyfus here, though he pretends otherwise at times. He mentions a wife and child in the outset almost as afterthoughts, then scarcely refers to them again. No false modesty for this guy - he runs the roost in every clink he is assigned, dispensing wisdom to prisoner and warden alike. No physical challenge is too much for him to overcome, no fellow "mec" too much for him to handle.

Let's put it this way: If Charriere is selling bridges, I ain't buying. But if this is more fiction than fact, "Papillon" still makes for one amazing novel. With minimal pretense at craft, Charriere crafts a white-knuckle, plain-spoken suspense tale that finds our hero in every imaginable predicament - and some not at all imaginable - as he makes attempt after attempt to escape the hell on earth that is French Guiana, the three Iles du Salut (literally "Isles of Salvation"), and ultimately Devil's Island. Taking you from the lush, mosquito-choked jungles of the Caribbean coastline to a solitary confinement where Papillon stays sane by imagining himself in childhood haunts, this is about as picturesque a ride as you can have sitting in your comfy chair.

A sense of life abounds in this book. Charriere holds court on such things as the proper way to sleep in a hammock, how one secretes money on one's "person," how the sharks knew when a corpse was about to be dumped in the sea, the strange tales prisoners tell, how one fishes for mullet on Devil's Island, etc. How much of this is on the level is tough to tell, but it fills the mind with a sense of a world lived in, and in one of the world's most obscure corners at that.

Whatever else, one statement Charriere makes is no doubt true: He is a spellbinding storyteller. He has a sense of the tragic and the funny and never lets the storyline sag. He also throws in nice little asides that keep the reader engaged. At one point, when he is thrown in solitary, Charriere takes a break from relating his squalor to offer this merry assurance: "The movie could not stop there; it must go on. It will go on, mecs! Just give me time to get back my strength and you'll have some new episodes, never fear!"

What makes "Papillon" especially readable and gripping is how Charriere comes into contact with the best and worst in people, sometimes the same people. The most seemingly depraved people can turn out to be not all bad; finding your hermit-like host keeps dead bodies in a pit outside his home is not necessarily proof he is out to do the same to you. He also has an intriguing religious sensibility, which yo-yos between antagonistic disbelief to a sense of profound grace. "Where there's life, there's hope" is an oft-repeated maxim in the book, and they are not hollow words for Papillon, whatever his state. Despair is unknown to him, and he's heartening to read for that alone.

I'd love to know how much of this tale is true. Apparently, there is a French-language book that analyzes the story of "Papillon" from a historical context, and the History Channel in the United States did a documentary you can order online. The little I've seen indicates some holes in the number of escape attempts Charriere made. But he was a prisoner, and then he was free; he wrote a book that, if just 10% true, would be enough to fill out four or five adventuresome lives; and his legacy is one people still passionately relate to more than 30 years after his death. I can't give this book five stars only because of this trust factor, but rest assured "Papillon" is worth your time, and you will be happy you read it.


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Perhaps the greatest story of all times

Without any fear of contradiction, I state that Henri Charriere is the greatest story teller of all times. His book dispenses with the usual boring literary prefaces, academic fluff, and the typical pointless essay-like exercises in boredom and other such language skills. From the very first word to the very last, the book is so flooring that one cannot put it down.
It takes no more than a pifly half a page to engage the reader, a feat no other author has been able to come close to.
In the 70s H. Charriere was attacked that Papillon was nothing more than a made up tale. My response is simple to all these allegations that still surround the authenticity of this book today.
I pray and hope that indeed H. Charriere made it all up and not a word of it is true! All the better!
This book is not about some factual nonsense or some historical account of the police files but about a personal battle for freedom, grace and honor. No other book is as uplifting and motivating. No other book is such an amazing read. No other book is in Henri Charriere's category!
I strongly recommend reading Banco, Henri's second and last book which continues his life after the escape.


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Absorbing and Uplifting Adventure

This translation of Charriere's autobiographical adventure tale is without question a work of lasting beauty. Whether or not you believe it is strictly factual is unimportant once you read the first few pages- you will become absorbed by the strength of spirit, the fascinating descriptions, the exotic locations, and the persistent optimism in the face of desperation. A book to make you treasure freedom and think about human rights.






Great book, not anything like the movie, it is better....

I saw the movie first and have seen it many times, I consider it one of my favorite movies. The book however is a lot better, and goes into a lot more detail than the movie did. In fact, the movie is so loosely based on the book there are hardly any similarities, except for maybe the name. The book describes Papillion's 6 or 7 cavale (escapes) attempts. The movie I think there are only three. Degas (Dustin Hoffman's character in the movie) is no where near as prominent a character as he was in the movie. Papillon's time in solitary confinement is also descibed a little different, and he gets sent there for different reasons than he did in the movie. The first time was punishment for the longest and best cavale. He received two years and the second time was for murder where he received 8 years, but only served two or less. Solitary was a lot more easy going the second time, and he was released after saving a child from drowning. In the book his most successful cavale is a lot more interesting than in the movie and it explains the time he spends with the natives in great detail. He takes two wives and has children. I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoyed the movie and wants to read the true story of Papillon and his struggle in the harsh French prison system.


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One of the Best Books I have ever Read

Papillon is a work of unparalleled brilliance. Charriere's description of his incarceration in the French penal colony in French Guyana is both riveting and haunting. For a man as uneducated as he claims, Charriere reveals himself as one of the 20th century's greatest writers, succeeding in use of suspense, allegory and poetic style.

Charriere builds a cohesive story, from the beginning in a rigged French court, through the trip to Cayenne, various cavales, and finally to a complete rebirth of spirit. Seen through eyes of compassion, anger, love and the wisdom of hindsight, Charriere gives a complete story that is not just an incredible adventure story, but a whole moral tale about life, strength, hope and faith.


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reviews: 1, 2, 3, page 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13



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