Details

ISBN-10: 1681379813
ISBN-13: 9781681379814
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Publish Date: 12/09/2025
Dimensions: 7.91" L, 5.11" W, 0.91" H

Friday

Translator: Norman Denny

Paperback

Price: $16.95

Overview

A provocative retelling of Robinson Crusoe, this classic of twentieth-century French literature depicts the explorer’s struggle to tame nature and the transformative power of his relationship with the indigenous character, Friday.

One of the most commonly assigned books in French high schools, Friday mines the philosophical underpinnings of Defoe’s original story, exploring concepts of imperialism, world-building, and existentialism.

Friday is the Friday of Robinson Crusoe, and Michel Tournier’s retelling of Defoe’s tale of solitude and survival turns it on its head. Cast away on a tropical island, the God-fearing Crusoe hasn’t the least doubt what he must do: tame the wilderness and stamp it with the sign of civilization, a fool’s errand to which he devotes years and in which he comes close to succeeding. Then Friday shows up, infuriating him with his “irrepressible, lyrical, and blasphemous” laugh, and a new, more challenging task confronts the island’s self-proclaimed master. But after an unforeseen event destroys all of Crusoe’s work, it is up to Friday to teach him just how ignorant he is and always has been.

Friday was Tournier’s first novel, and it quickly found a wondering and delighted readership. Writing about the book in his autobiography, Tournier asks, “What was Friday to Daniel Defoe? Nothing: an animal, at best a creature waiting to receive his humanity from Robinson Crusoe, who as a European was in sole possession of all knowledge and wisdom.” In Friday, Tournier steps out of the secular world of the Western novel into the sacred precincts of universal mythology. The result is radiant, sensual, funny, and utterly unexpected–a modern masterpiece.

Read More
Reviews
"Tournier transposes Defoe's story into a vehicle for both symbolic action and philosophic reflection. The double point of view permits striking meditations not only on God, religion, and morality as in Defoe, but also on perception, identity, and the temptations of oblivion." –Roger Shattuck, The New York Review of Books

"A fascinating, unusual novel . . . a remarkably heady French wine in the old English bottle . . . Tournier has attempted nothing less than an exploration of the soul of modern man." –The New York Times Book Review

"Like [Crusoe's island], Tournier's novel is unique, self-sufficient, imaginative, well worth exploring, and with a number of minor miracles to reveal." –Time

"Friday is the latest and one of the best examples of the French genius for revisionism–for ringing original variations on a traditional theme. It is also unique in that enterprise because it is so moving, so touching in its elegance, so simple in its art." –Richard Howard

"Defoe's book is distinguished by an unawareness of the psychology of solitude; nothing happens. Michel Tournier, however has placed his man in precisely the same situation of static impotence, and then proceeds to illustrate a personal development as passionate and variegated as anyone could wish." –New Statesman

"M. Tournier is a cultivated and disciplined writer, and his Robinson, the son of a Yorkshire draper, is most likable . . . The castaway has that quaint and peculiarly English stolidity that seems to exist only in the imagination of the French." –The New Yorker

More Reviews

Details

ISBN-10: 1681379813
ISBN-13: 9781681379814
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Publish Date: 12/09/2025
Dimensions: 7.91" L, 5.11" W, 0.91" H
Skip to content