#BookReview A Life Without End by Frédéric Beigbeder @WorldEdBooks

A Life Without EndAbout the Book

What does the man who has everything – fame, fortune, a new love, and a new baby – want for his fiftieth birthday? The answer is simple: eternal life.

Determined to shake off the first intimations of his approaching demise, Frédéric tries every possible procedure to ward off death, examining both legal and illegal research into techniques that could lead to the imminent replacement of man with a post-human species. Accompanied by his ten-year-old daughter and her robot friend, Frédéric criss-crosses the globe to meet the world’s foremost researchers on human longevity, who – from cell rejuvenation and telomere lengthening to 3D-printed organs and digitally stored DNA – reveal their latest discoveries.

With his blend of deadpan humour and clear-eyed perception, Beigbeder has penned a brutal and brilliant exposé of the enduring issue of our own mortality.

Format: Paperback (304 pages)  Publisher: World Editions
Publication date: 16 April 2020 Genre: Contemporary Fiction

Find A Life Without End on Goodreads

Purchase links*
Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

For a fair bit of this book I found myself trying to work out whether it was fiction or non-fiction. I came to the conclusion that it’s a mixture of both. Many of the people Frédéric meets do exist in real life (thank you, Google) and hold the positions in the scientific and commercial institutions mentioned. Without a lot of research, I’m unable to say how much of what they tell him about their discoveries and how they might be used is accurate, but I’m betting most of it is. That’s a bit scary in some cases.

This is my first book by the author but, reading up on him, I learned that there is a strong autobiographical element to his work. For instance, in the book, the narrator is married to his second wife and has two daughter, as does the author (although the names of his wife and daughters have been changed). I’m unsure if he shares with the narrator a seeming preoccupation with women’s breasts.

There are some great one-liners such as the author’s observation about the current obsession with selfies that, “Modern man is a collection of 75 trillion cells all striving to become pixels.” In fact, the subject of selfies is a bit of a running joke. There are also quirky touches such as tables entitled Advantages and Disadvantages Of Death, Some Differences Between A Thirtysomething Single Guy And A Fiftysomething Father (‘Goes clubbing in Ibiza vs. Buys a holiday home in the Basque Country’) and Key Differences Between Human And Robot (‘Cogito ergo sum vs. Cogito ergo sum coniuncta ad Wi-Fi’).

Great fun is had with Pepper the Japanese robot who accompanies Frédéric and his daughter, Romy, on their travels to interview scientists and doctors in his quest for the secret of immortality. There are some scenes in a spa resort they visit that are laugh out loud funny.

Encompassing topics as varied as genome sequencing, psychoanalysis, cell renewal, transgenic foods and blood transfusions, the book addresses serious issues as well and contains some sobering statistics, although true to the author’s style these are delivered with humour. Life is a hecatomb. A mass murder that slaughters 59 million people a year. 1.9 deaths per second. 158,857 deaths a day. Twenty people have died around the world since the beginning of this paragraph – more if you’re a slow reader.’ [I had to look up hecatomb as well. It means the sacrifice or slaughter of many victims.]

To begin with, I wasn’t sure I was going to like this book but in fact I found it fascinating, albeit a little chilling at times, especially the chapter in which the author sets out a distinctly dystopian view of the future. Frédéric’s wife, Leonore, a trained scientist, provides a counterbalance to her husband’s belief in the benefits of immortality. She argues, “A life without end would be a life without purpose” and later, tiring (and who can blame her) of his incessant search for the secret of defeating death, describes it as “a fantasy designed to humour infantile, ignorant, narcissistic megalomaniacs who can’t bring themselves to face the inevitable.

As well as being a very funny book, the narrator’s relationship with his elder daughter is rather touching and the end of the book is surprisingly moving. Does Frédéric find what he’s searching for? As one character tells him, “Perhaps if you publish it the ending will change. You know better than anyone that literature can conquer time.” Do you see what he did there?

I can’t end this review without commending the translator for his skill in reproducing the author’s self-mocking style and communicating with clarity such complex scientific information. If I wasn’t able to grasp quite all of it, that’s definitely my failing not his.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of World Editions.

In three words: Playful, thought-provoking, satirical


CROPPED-Beigbeder-F-c-jf-Paga-GRASSET-500x500About the Author

Frédéric Beigbeder is a French journalist and critic, and is responsible for the literary section of Le Figaro Magazine. Also a bestselling author, his novel 99 Francs both got him fired from his advertising job and established him as a controversial force within French literature. For his other novels, he has been awarded various prizes including the 2003 Prix Interallié and the 2009 Prix Renaudot, and the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize in 2005 for his novel Windows on the World. He is a regular guest on French national morning radio, and a frequent contributor to El País Icon (Spain), Interview (Germany), and Esquire (Russia).

About the Translator

Frank Wynne is a literary translator and writer. Born in Ireland, he moved to France in 1984 where he discovered a passion for language. He began translating literature in the late 1990s, and in 2001 decided to devote himself to this full time. He has translated works by Michel Houellebecq, Frédéric Beigbeder, Ahmadou Kourouma, Boualem Sansal, Claude Lanzmann, Tómas Eloy Martínez, and Almudena Grandes. His work has earned him a number of awards, including the Scott Moncrieff Prize and the Premio Valle Inclán. Most recently, his translation of Vernon Subutex by Virginie Despentes was shortlisted for the Man Booker International 2018.

#BookReview Summer of the Three Pagodas by Jean Moran @HoZ_Books

Summer of the Three PagodasAbout the Book

Hong Kong, 1950. Now the war is over, Dr Rowena Rossiter is ready to plan a new life with her great love, Connor O’Connor. But before they can, bad news arrives.

A female doctor is urgently needed in Seoul and the powers that be want Rowena to go. She refuses – until rumours begin to swirl about the sinister, beautiful man who held her captive during the war.

They say he may still be alive and looking for her. By comparison, Korea on the brink of war seems safer, but will Rowena ever truly be able to escape the shadows of her violent past?

Format: Hardcover (422 pages)      Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 5th March 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Summer of the Three Pagodas on Goodreads

Purchase links*
Amazon.co.uk| Amazon.com | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme


My Review

The events in Summer of the Three Pagodas follow on from Jean Moran’s previous book, Tears of the Dragon. If, like me, you haven’t read the earlier book I can reassure you that Summer of the Three Pagodas works perfectly well as a standalone read. However, it does contain references to key events in Tears of the Dragon which would amount to spoilers for that book.

Kim Pheloung, the ‘sinister, beautiful man’ mentioned in the book description (and who featured prominently in the previous book) is a constant if shadowy presence in Summer of the Three Pagodas. However, Rowena’s fear that he may still pose a threat to her and her daughter, Dawn, propels much of the plot and will have dramatic and, in some cases, tragic consequences. And, as it happens, there’s another candidate for ‘chief villain’ close at hand who proves to be just as ruthless.

The storyline moves between Hong Kong Island and Kowloon, to Korea and back again. There is some great descriptive writing. I particularly liked how the author conjured up the atmosphere of Kowloon’s Walled City, a squalid labyrinth of ‘shambolic and haphazard construction’, full of dark alleyways that are the haunt of criminal gangs. A place to venture into at your peril.

It seems the author has a fondness for invertebrate-related similes. For example, ‘The local headquarters was based in what had been a school, typewriters clicking like manic grasshoppers.‘ Or how about
The chock-chock-chock sound of helicopter blades filled the air, their outlines like a swarm of hornets roused from their nest.‘ Later a helicopter is described as hanging ‘like a black insect in the sky, like a huge mosquito’ and later still another as like ‘a black spider’. Ugh.

As well as being a compelling, well-crafted story, Summer of the Three Pagodas exposes the cruelty and futility of war and explores issues such as racism, the plight of refugees and women’s rights. The book features some strong female characters; Rowena herself but also the capable and formidable Kate, sister of Rowena’s partner, Connor, and the courageous Sheridan Warrington, prepared to defy her father despite the consequences. As Rowena remarks at one point, “This is nineteen fifty. The world is changing.”

My thanks to Lauren at Head of Zeus for my advance review copy.

In three words: Atmospheric, compelling, romantic

Try something similar: The Garden of Evening Mists by Tan Twan Eng

Follow my blog via Bloglovin


Jean_MoranAbout the Author

Jean Moran was a columnist and editor before writing full-time. She has since published over fifty novels and been a bestseller in Germany.

Jean was born and raised in Bristol. Her mother, who endured both the depression and war years, was a natural born storyteller, and it’s from her telling of actual experiences of the tumultuous first half of the twentieth century that Jean gets her inspiration.

Her novel Tears of the Dragon was published by Head of Zeus in 2019. Jean now lives in Bath. (Photo credit: Publisher author page)

Connect with Jean
Twitter