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1995 novel by Brian Moore From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Statement (1995) is a thriller novel by Northern Irish-Canadian writer Brian Moore. Set in the south of France and Paris in the early 1990s, The Statement is the tale of Pierre Brossard, a former officer in the pro-fascist militia that served Vichy France and a murderer of Jews. The novel was published by Bloomsbury in the United Kingdom in 1995 and by E.P. Dutton in the United States on 1 June 1996.
Author | Brian Moore |
---|---|
Genre | Thriller novel |
Publisher | Bloomsbury (UK); E.P. Dutton (U.S.) |
Publication date | 1995 (UK); 1996 (U.S.) |
Preceded by | Lies of Silence (1990) |
Followed by | The Magician's Wife (1997) |
Now 70 years old, Brossard has spent the better part of his life in hiding by traveling among the monasteries and abbeys that offer him asylum. Though he has evaded capture for decades with the help of the French government and the Catholic Church, a new breed of government officials is now determined to break decades of silence and expose and to expiate the crimes of Vichy France.
The character of Pierre Brossard in The Statement is inspired by Paul Touvier (1915–1996),[1][2] a French Nazi collaborator who was arrested for war crimes in 1989. After his arrest, charges appeared in the media that alleged that Touvier had been protected by the [Catholic Church and government officials. In 1994, Touvier became the first Frenchman ever convicted of crimes against humanity,[3] for his participation in the Holocaust under Vichy France.
Emma Hagestadt, writing in The Independent, said that "the late Brian Moore's 18th novel is also one of his best – a gripping moral thriller based on the real life story of Paul Touvier, 'the torturer of Lyon'" and described it as "Tautly written and steeped in atmosphere".[1]
The novel was adapted into a 2003 film, directed by Norman Jewison and starring Michael Caine and Tilda Swinton. The screenplay was written by Ronald Harwood.[4]
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