The Young Man
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
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.” —Elle
“Once again the work of the writer Annie Ernaux appears as both a rigorous study of life and an experiment. These fragments of living, however evanescent, are precious, irreplaceable, like a skin that never fades.” —Caroline Montpetit in Le Devoir
The Young Man is Annie Ernaux’s account of her passionate love affair with A., a man some 30 years younger, when she was in her fifties. The relationship pulls her back to memories of her own youth and at the same time leaves her feeling ageless, outside of time— together with a sense that she is living her life backwards.
Amidst talk of having a child together, she feels time running its course, and menopause approaching. The Young Man recalls Ernaux as the “scandalous girl” she once was, but is composed with the mastery and the self-assurance she has achieved across decades of writing. It was first published in France in 2022.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Nobel Prize winner Ernaux (The Years) recounts her yearlong affair with a man three decades her junior in this slim yet stunning memoir. After the man, a student referred to here only as "A," made several attempts to contact Ernaux about her work, she began seeing and sleeping with him in 1998, when he was 24 and she was 54. Initially trepidatious, Ernaux quickly became enchanted by the ways A. helped her "travel through all the ages of life," stirring memories of her own time as a student and reminding her of the working-class roots she'd learned to weed out in adulthood. Remarkably clear-eyed about the relationship's pitfalls and pleasures, Ernaux shares, in fragments, the ways it provoked within her both a sense of righteousness ("Any fifty-something guy could carry on openly with a woman obviously not his daughter without arousing disapproval") and sadness ("More and more it seemed to me that I could continue to accumulate images, experiences, years, and no longer feel anything but repetition itself"). Eventually, the sadness took over, and Ernaux ended their relationship in the fall of 1999, "happy to be entering the third millennium alone and free." Throughout, she suffuses even simple moments—a brasserie lunch, a glimpse out of the window at her lover's house—with a kind of magic, seamlessly layering the perspectives of her current and former selves. The result is a poignant and essential addition to Ernaux's oeuvre.