Michael C. Moynihan | May 8, 2008
Celebrated French writer Michel Houellebecq, author of the
terrific novel Elementary Particles, is doubtless
accustomed to being scorned by the Paris literati. He is
notoriously un-PC, having recently been prosecuted for
calling Islam the "stupidest " religion. He is frequently accused
of indulging in needless "obscenity" and gratuitous sexism. He was expelled from the leftish
literary collective/review Les Perpendiculaires for being
irredeemably bourgeois. But now he faces his toughest and most
acerbic critic in the 83-year-old French writer Lucie Ceccaldi. So
what is Ceccaldi's problem with Houellebecq? Well, for starters,
she deems him an "evil, stupid little bastard," a "liar, an
imposter, a parasite and above all—above all—a petit
arriviste ready to do absolutely anything for money and fame."
Of Elementary Particles, Ceccaldi says: "That book is pure
pornography, it's repugnant, it's crap. I don't understand its
success at all, that just shows the decadance of France." And the
rest of his oeuvre: "What's this moronic literature?! Houellebecq
is someone who's never done anything, who's never really desired
anything, who never wanted to look at others. And that arrogance of
taking yourself as superior ... Stupid little bastard. Yes,
Houellebecq's a stupid little bastard..." The Guardian
has more on the spat.
It should be noted, though, that Ceccaldi is currently promoting
her own memoir, titled L'Innocente, and is obviously
trying to gin up interest in the book. And perhaps it should also
be noted, in the spirit of full disclosure, that Mme. Ceccaldi is
M. Houellebecq's mother.
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