History of violence / Édouard Louis ; translated from the French by Lorin Stein.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780374170592 : HRD
- ISBN: 0374170592 : HRD
- Physical Description: 212 pages ; 20 cm
- Edition: First American edition.
- Publisher: New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2018.
Content descriptions
Summary, etc.: | "On Christmas Eve 2012, in Paris, the novelist Édouard Louis was raped and almost murdered by a man he had just met. This act of violence left Louis shattered; its aftermath made him a stranger to himself and sent him back to the village, the family, and the past he had sworn to leave behind. A bestseller in France, History of Violence is a short nonfiction novel in the tradition of Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood, but with the victim as its subject. Moving seamlessly and hypnotically between past and present, between Louis’s voice and the voice of an imagined narrator, History of Violence has the exactness of a police report and the searching, unflinching curiosity of memoir at its best. It records not only the casual racism and homophobia of French society but also their subtle effects on lovers, brothers and sisters, husbands and wives. It represents a great step forward for a young writer whose acuity, skill, and depth are unmatched by any novelist of his generation, in French or English."-- Amazon.com. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Louis, Édouard > Fiction. Rape > Fiction. |
Genre: | Autobiographical fiction. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.
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History of Violence : A Novel
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Author Notes
History of Violence : A Novel
Ãdouard Louis is the author of the international bestsellers The End of Eddy and History of Violence , and the editor of a scholarly work on the social scientist Pierre Bourdieu. Compared to Jean Genet by The Paris Review , his work deals with sexuality, class, and violence. Louis was born Eddy Bellegeule in the working-class village of Hallencourt in northern France, and he attended the Ãcole Normale Supérieure and the Ãcole des Hautes Ãtudes en Sciences Sociales. Lorin Stein is a critic, translator, and former editor of The Paris Review .