One woman's journaling of the world around her--from the quotidian to the momentous-- from 1993 to 1999 in France
No TOC
Annie Ernaux, winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature, was born in 1940 in Lillebonne, France. Ernaux's autobiographical narrative, La Place, won the Prix Renaudot, and her books, A Woman’s Story and A Man’s Place, were named New York Times Notable Books of the Year. Ernaux’s most recent novel, Les Années, is widely considered one of her greatest works. She is the author of Do What They Say or Else (Nebraska, 2022). Jonathan Kaplansky has translated numerous works, including Hélène Dorion's novel Days of Sand and Hélène Rioux's novel Wednesday Night at the End of the World. Brian Evenson is a professor and director of the Literary Arts Program at Brown University. He is the author of Altmann’s Tongue (available in a Bison Books edition) and, most recently, Last Days and Fugue State.
"Annie Ernaux was blogging about her daily life long before the
blog was invented. If anyone can raise it to an art form, she can.
. . . This is a beautiful translation."—Susan Salter Reynolds, Los
Angeles Times Discoveries
“Annie Ernaux somehow succeeds in expressing the personal, whether
it be . . . a description of her terror during a tear-gas attack in
the subway, or her references to the importance of the role of
writing in her own life. . . . It successfully compels the reader
to reflect critically on our current era.”—E. Nicole Meyer, World
Literature Today
"Like a poet, Ernaux writes with dense, image-packed language; like
a novelist, she seeks compelling characters to appear and disappear
throughout her text."—Rachel Mennies, ForeWord Reviews
"Readers unafraid of mixing the personal and political, as in the
works of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre, will glean much
here. And memoir readers of a more traditional bent may look at the
world quite differently after savoring this book."—Travis Fristoe,
Library Journal
"Beautiful and powerful."—Alison McCulloch, New York Times Book
Review
“La Vie extérieure bears witness to the desire, the need to capture
life, even the insignificant. It attests to the memory that we have
of others, including strangers, and in whom Annie Ernaux searches
for and recognizes herself. La Vie extérieure is also a book of
assessment and indignation. The writer reacts to human distress,
war, poverty, and to the arrogance of power.”—Johanne Jarry, Le
Devoir (Montreal)
“La Vie extérieure perfectly illustrates writing’s raison d’être. .
. . Annie Ernaux transcribes scenes from the RER, the welfare
office, and the check-out at the supermarket; things noted on
television and radio; insignificant gestures and words that bring
the writer’s agitation, indignation, and anger to the
surface.”—Christine Rousseau, Le Monde (Paris)
Ask a Question About this Product More... |