Biographie de la faim 
Amelies works features a wonderful amount of insanity which I cant help but admire
Perhaps I should have read more novels before picking up this weird little autobiography which covers the authors life from 5 through to her awkward teenaged years in Japan, China, New York, Bangladesh, Belgium and then back to Japan. Nothombs writing is so stylized that it feels utterly appropriate to be reading it in translation. Surely she must be an alien wherever shes from. Tantalizingly brief, I want to be sat next to her at a dinner party.

The only other novel I've read by Nothomb was Stupeur et Tremblements; it was too dark for my taste and so I avoided her books for a long time. But I found Biographie de la faim far more engaging, with the glimpses it provides of the different countries where the protagonist spent her childhood (her family repeatedly moved from place to place). There is a sensationalist quality to the writing that sometimes irks me (the narrator is always being 'sidérée' by one thing or another), but I like her
The French have a category of books called auto-fiction, that is to say, novels based more or less on the authors own life. That it is acknowledged to be fiction allows the author a measure of literary licence to embellish where it best suits the demands of the narrative. Unsurprisingly, it can lead to some dreadfully self-indulgent navel-gazing. (Yes, François Weyergans, Im looking at you, and no, I dont care that you won the Prix Goncourt for Trois jours chez ma mère (Three Days at My Mothers
Interesting...strange...made me think about hunger and life. Being alive is the greatest gift...
Boring. DNF. Waste of time.
Amélie Nothomb
Hardcover | Pages: 252 pages Rating: 3.77 | 5496 Users | 486 Reviews

Point Out Of Books Biographie de la faim
Title | : | Biographie de la faim |
Author | : | Amélie Nothomb |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 252 pages |
Published | : | August 25th 2004 by Albin Michel |
Categories | : | Fiction. Cultural. France. Contemporary. Roman |
Narrative In Favor Of Books Biographie de la faim
“La faim, c’est moi”, proclame Amélie Nothomb. Dans Biographie de la faim, la surdouée belge poursuit le récit de sa vie amorcé dans Stupeurs et tremblements et Métaphysique des tubes. La faim, chez Amélie Nothomb, n’est pas que physique. Elle est surtout “ce manque effroyable de l’être entier, ce vide tenaillant (…) là où il n’y a rien, j’implore qu’il y ait quelque chose.” Ce quelque chose sera pour elle l’écriture. À 37 ans, elle a déjà publié une douzaine de romans et ses tiroirs regorgent de manuscrits. Biographie de la faim raconte aussi les années d’apprentissage de l’auteure au Japon – où elle est née –, à New York, au Bangladesh, en Birmanie et au Laos, où elle a suivi ses parents diplomates. À trois ans, elle découvre “la surfaim (…) la possession du principe même de la jouissance”. De façon brillante et décalée, Amélie Nothomb explique comment lui est venu cet insatiable appétit pour absolument tout : l’eau, l’alcool, l’amour, la lecture, la beauté, l’absolu. Elle raconte aussi comment le deuil de l’enfance a brouillé pour toujours son rapport avec la nourriture.Specify Books Conducive To Biographie de la faim
Original Title: | Biographie de la faim |
ISBN: | 2226153942 (ISBN13: 9782226153944) |
Edition Language: | French URL http://www.albin-michel.fr/Biographie-de-la-faim-EAN=9782226153944 |
Rating Out Of Books Biographie de la faim
Ratings: 3.77 From 5496 Users | 486 ReviewsRate Out Of Books Biographie de la faim
Just another autobiographical novel....😫Amelies works features a wonderful amount of insanity which I cant help but admire
Perhaps I should have read more novels before picking up this weird little autobiography which covers the authors life from 5 through to her awkward teenaged years in Japan, China, New York, Bangladesh, Belgium and then back to Japan. Nothombs writing is so stylized that it feels utterly appropriate to be reading it in translation. Surely she must be an alien wherever shes from. Tantalizingly brief, I want to be sat next to her at a dinner party.

The only other novel I've read by Nothomb was Stupeur et Tremblements; it was too dark for my taste and so I avoided her books for a long time. But I found Biographie de la faim far more engaging, with the glimpses it provides of the different countries where the protagonist spent her childhood (her family repeatedly moved from place to place). There is a sensationalist quality to the writing that sometimes irks me (the narrator is always being 'sidérée' by one thing or another), but I like her
The French have a category of books called auto-fiction, that is to say, novels based more or less on the authors own life. That it is acknowledged to be fiction allows the author a measure of literary licence to embellish where it best suits the demands of the narrative. Unsurprisingly, it can lead to some dreadfully self-indulgent navel-gazing. (Yes, François Weyergans, Im looking at you, and no, I dont care that you won the Prix Goncourt for Trois jours chez ma mère (Three Days at My Mothers
Interesting...strange...made me think about hunger and life. Being alive is the greatest gift...
Boring. DNF. Waste of time.
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