The most blackly humorous and disenchanted voice in all of French literature.

London Review of Books

The miraculous, long-lost final installment of the Death on the Installment Plan trilogy: London is the last key work of the legendary Louis-Ferdinand Céline

Available Oct 13, 2026

London

Fiction by Louis-Ferdinand Céline

Translated from French by Charlotte Mandell

London centers on Ferdinand, the protagonist of Céline’s War who is a gravely injured WWI soldier with a severe wound to his ear and suffers from both vertigo and the endless noise he can’t stop hearing: I caught the war in my head. It’s locked up inside my head. Ferdinand has earned a reprieve as well as a medal, and he has left France to join his prostitute friend Angèle in London. Despite his decoration, he nevertheless fears being sent back to the front and, in semi-hiding, takes up residence in an attic room where his pal Cantaloup runs an intense sex- trafficking operation. Colorful characters populate London: besides Cantaloup and Angèle, there is the generous poor Jewish doctor Yugenbitz, the corrupt cop Bijou, an eccentric English aristocrat, a slew of pimps, a rich variety of whores, and the revolutionary former bomb-maker Borokrom.

London is also a sweeping, grand-narrative-as-funhouse-mirror of Céline’s own dual profession of medicine and writing: It’s true I was sick and in a lot of pain and so I was justified. The consolation of having found Yugenbitz and the path, and the way that he’d given me hope to understand his beautiful work, that had sort of intoxicated me, I admit. I’m a little too enthusiastic about things of the mind. I’d have liked I think to cure all human diseases, so they’d never suffer again, the bastards. We’re a strange lot, if we only admit it. Fine.

Paperback

published: Oct 13, 2026

ISBN:
9780811237345
Price U.S.:
29.95
Trim Size:
5x8
Page Count:
576

Ebook

ISBN:
9780811237352
Portrait of Louis-Ferdinand Céline

Louis-Ferdinand Céline

20th century French writer and physician

The most blackly humorous and disenchanted voice in all of French literature.

London Review of Books

The prose stylist of the century.

The Guardian

Céline is my Proust!

Philip Roth