Alcools by Guillaume Apollinaire
Guillaume Apollinaire's Alcools isn't a novel with a clear plot—it's a collection of poems that acts like a diary of a changing world. Published in 1913, it captures the moment just before World War I shattered Europe. The poems move through taverns and art studios, ancient forests and smoky train stations. They tell stories of doomed love affairs, lonely wanderers, and the ghosts of old legends bumping into the new century.
The Story
There's no single story here. Instead, you get snapshots. One poem might be a sad ballad about a lost love in the rain. The next feels like walking through a bustling Paris street at night. Apollinaire famously removed all punctuation from the book, so the lines flow into each other without pause. It makes you feel like you're inside his head, thoughts rushing by. Some poems are personal, about his own heartbreaks. Others are about characters like the wandering Jew or figures from myth. The whole collection has this nervous energy, like the world is speeding up and no one knows where it's headed.
Why You Should Read It
I love this book because it feels alive. Apollinaire isn't just decorating pages with pretty words. He's trying to invent a new way of seeing. When he writes about a bridge or a streetlamp, it feels magical. He mixes sadness with a real excitement for the future—the cars, the movies, the new art. You can feel his loneliness, but also his wonder. Reading it, you start to see how art was breaking all the old rules right before the war changed everything. It's a personal and historical document rolled into one.
Final Verdict
Perfect for anyone curious about where modern poetry began, or for readers who want something short but powerful. If you like artists like Picasso or the energy of a city at night, you'll find something here. It's not always easy—some poems are puzzling—but the best ones stick with you. Give it a read if you're ready for a trip to a Paris that doesn't exist anymore, seen through the eyes of a true original.
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Kenneth Davis
5 months agoI had low expectations initially, however the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. I will read more from this author.