<p>The Alluring (1931) is what is known as a Robinsonade&mdash;an account of a castaway on a desert island and his hard battle for physical and psychological survival. F&eacute;licien Champsaur having decided to write a Robinsonade aware that he was following in a great tradition wanted to make it a Robinsonade that would go further than any other: a kind of ultimate Robinsonade.</p><p><br />His principal interest is not in the basic requirements for physical survival but in the subtler demands of mental survival: hypothetical solutions to the problem of psychological isolation.</p><p><br />The Alluring is worthy of attention not only because of the imaginative extravagance of the story which displays an exuberant and sometimes blackly comic playfulness typical of Champsaur&rsquo;s work but also because of its idiosyncratic nature.&nbsp;</p>
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