Description
                                                            
Bove's tale of a World War I veteran living in postwar Paris, searching for friendship and warmth, is an ironic, entertaining masterpiece by one of France's favorite authors.My Friends is Emmanuel Bove's first and most famous book, and it begins simply,  though unusually, enough: “When I wake up, my mouth is open. My teeth  are furry: it would be better to brush them in the evening, but I am  never brave enough.” Victor Baton is speaking, and he is a classic  little man, of no talent or distinction or importance and with no  illusions that he has any of those things, either; in fact, if he is  exceptional, it is that life's most basic transactions seem to confound  him more than they do the rest of us. All Victor wants is to be loved,  all he wants is a friend, and as he strays through the streets of Paris  in search of love or friendship or some fleeting connection, we laugh  both at Victor's meekness and at his odd pride, but we feel with him,  too. Victor is after all a kind of everyman, the indomitable knight of  human fragility. And, in spite of everything, he, or at least his  creator, is some kind of genius, investing the back streets and rented  rooms of the city and the unsorted moments of daily life with a weird  and unforgettable clarity.