Windows on the World (novel)

Cover of the U.S. release of the novel.

Windows on the World a novel written by Frédéric Beigbeder was first published in France in 2003. The English translation by Frank Wynne was released March 30, 2005 by Miramax Books.

Plot summary

The novel alternates between two voices: the first Carthew Yorsten, a Texan realtor accompanied by his two sons (ages 7 and 9) who are having a tourist-style breakfast at Windows on the World restaurant on the 107th floor of the World Trade Center on the morning of the September 11 attacks; the second, the voice of the author writing the story while having breakfast at a restaurant atop a Paris skyscraper (Tour Montparnasse). Each chapter, averaging three pages a piece, represents one minute from 8.30 am - just before the time the building is hit at 8:46am - to 10.29, just after its collapse at 10:28am.

Film adaptation

Max Pugh a dual nationality French / English filmmaker is working on an "animated feature drama/documentary adaptation". [1]

Prizes

The novel debuted at No 2 on the French best seller list and won the prestigious Prix Interallié in 2003.

It won the 2005 Independent Prize for Foreign Fiction awarded by the British newspaper. [2]

Independent literary editor and judge Boyd Tonkin said: "Frederic Beigbeder's winning novel pulls off the impossible - it creates fiction about the tragedy of 11 September and our responses to it," [2]

See also

References

  1. Max Pugh Profile, BBC Film Network.
  2. 1 2 "Fiction prize won by 9/11 novel" BBC.com, Wednesday, 27 April, 2005.

External links


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