Available Formats
The Young Man
By (Author) Annie Ernaux
Translated by Alison Strayer
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
19th September 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: general
Gender studies: women and girls
Autobiography: writers
B
Paperback
64
Width 138mm, Height 208mm, Spine 5mm
85g
WINNER OF THE 2022 NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE Annie Ernaux's most recent book, dazzling and breathtaking, published in France in 2022, is about her affair with a man 30 years her junior. "A sublime book." -Olivia de Lamberterie, Elle Here, in a breathtakingly short book, Ernaux recounts a relationship that made her become again-for several months-the "scandalous girl" of her younger years. The book takes place in Rouen, where Ernaux studied in the early 1960s, and begins in a student apartment, where A. lives-we only know her lover's initial. The windows of his apartment look out at the hospital where Ernaux experienced her secret abortion thirty years prior. A. takes the narrator back to memories of her own youth and makes her feel ageless, outside of time-she has the sense that she is living her life backwards. Here Ernaux again explores shame-she considers how A.'s friends ask him how he can be with a woman in menopause-and anticipation for their next encounter, quintessential and masterfully excavating themes from her previous books like Simple Passion and her New York Times bestseller Getting Lost. "The whole book is fascinating, because it avoids the simplifications of unanimous hagiography. Of course, this volume is also a tribute, and on almost every page we read the signs of a fervent admiration." -Le Monde
ANNIE ERNAUX, winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature, is the author of some twenty works of fiction and memoir, winner of the Prix Renaudot for A Man's Place, and of the Marguerite Yourcenar Prize for her body of work. She is also the winner of the International Strega Prize and the French-American Translation Prize and shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize for The Years. In 2019 she was the recipient of the Prix Formentor. She is now considered to be France's most important literary voice, and is the first French woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. ALISON L. STRAYER is a Canadian writer and translator. Her work has been shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for Literature and for Translation, the Grand Prix du livre de Montreal, and the Prix litteraire France-Quebec. She lives in Paris.