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Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments
In a controversial first novel that took the French literary
world by storm and won the Prix de Flore, Tristan Garcia uses sex,
friendships, and love affairs to show what happens to people when
political ideals--Marxism, gay rights, sexual liberation,
nationalism--come to an end. As Elizabeth Levallois, a cultural
journalist, looks back on this decade and on the ravages of the
AIDS epidemic in Paris, a drama unfolds--one in which love turns to
hate and fidelity turns to betrayal, in both affairs of the heart
and politics.
The radical, urgent new novel from the author of The End of Eddy – a personal and powerful story of violence. I met Reda on Christmas Eve 2012, at around four in the morning. He approached me in the street, and finally I invited him up to my apartment. He told me the story of his childhood and how his father had come to France, having fled Algeria. We spent the rest of the night together, talking, laughing. At around 6 o'clock, he pulled out a gun and said he was going to kill me. He insulted me, strangled and raped me. The next day, the medical and legal proceedings began. History of Violence retraces the story of that night, and looks at immigration, class, racism, desire and the effects of trauma in an attempt to understand a history of violence, its origins, its reasons and its causes. ‘It stays with you’ Times ‘A heartbreaking novel’ John Boyne
Who Killed My Father is the story of a tough guy - the story of the little boy I never was. The story of my father. 'What a beautiful book' MAX PORTER In Who Killed My Father, Edouard Louis explores key moments in his father's life, and the tenderness and disconnects in their relationship. Told with the fire of a writer determined on social justice, and with the compassion of a loving son, the book urgently and brilliantly engages with issues surrounding masculinity, class, homophobia, shame and social poverty. It unflinchingly takes aim at systems that disadvantage those they seek to exclude - those who have their expectations, hopes and passions crushed by a society which gives them little thought. 'Edouard Louis is the vanguard of France's new generation of political writers' Evening Standard
The bestselling novel that became an Oscar-winning film starring
Elizabeth Taylor about New York's speakeasy generation
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