This highly original book imitates the protagonist, Agnès, of Kundera's novel Immortality. Like all readers of fiction, when Agnès steps out of the car, she steps out of the world of planned routes, responsibilities, and social self, and gives herself up to the discovery of a new landscape, an experience that will transform her. François Ricard's beautiful essay enters into the writings of Milan Kundera in much the same way. The landscape he explores in Agnès's Final Afternoon includes a chain of ten novels, composed between 1959 and 1999; he takes us through the themes and characters of the novels, their structural composition, and innovations of form and content that stretch the boundaries of the novel to breaking point.François Ricard is a Professor of French Literature at McGill University. He has been writing about the work of Milan Kundera for fifteen years.
Aaron Asher Ordre des livres



- 2003
- 2000
La vie est ailleurs
- 472pages
- 17 heures de lecture
Second volet d'une trilogie commencée par "La plaisanterie" et qui s'achève avec "La valse des adieux". Prix Médicis étranger 1973. Le héros est une sorte de Rimbaud "materné", médiocre aussi bien dans le rôle de bourreau que de victime, pris au piège de la "révolution" communiste. Postface, p. 397-405, écrite en 1978 (Lire Kundera c'est adopter le point de vue de Satan sur toute connaissance: politique, amour, histoire, poésie). Oeuvre majeure.
- 1996
C'est un roman sur Prague et sur les anges, sur le rire et sur l'oubli.