The great escape: Vol de Nuit and the summer of our discontent

Our previously unthinkable, pandemic-besieged moment is a good time to revisit Saint-Exupéry’s humanist epic.
Vol de Nuit, the 1931 work by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, pictured near Montreal in 1942, stands out in COVID-19 quarantine as a paean to outside and for its empathy, writes Lisa Van Dusen.
Sometimes, during the first two decades of this Jeremy Bentham-meets-Elmore Leonard century, I've feared that reality has spoiled me for fiction. That living in a world in which technology, corruption, industrialized, “post-truth” bollocks and the tactical obliteration of ethical boundaries have...

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