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The Life of Hunger
The Life of Hunger | Amelie Nothomb
2 posts | 4 read | 3 to read
In a wistful, tough, funny, clever, and characteristically odd memoir-cum-novel, Amelie Nothomb casts herself as hunger: hunger for experience, hunger for life, hunger for sweetness and, in what is the book's nucleus, hunger for hunger (the period during which she was afflicted by acute anorexia). The daughter of a Belgian diplomat, Amelie had an itinerant childhood, ranging from Tokyo to Peking and Paris to New York by way of Bangladesh. Recounting these formative journeys right up to her return to Japan in 1989, and the Kobe earthquake, The Life of Hunger is an extraordinary examination of the self, and perhaps Amelie's most mature and moving work to date.
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Adventures-of-a-French-Reader
The Life of Hunger | Amelie Nothomb
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It has been a while since I last read a book by Amélie Nothomb, and I find it always nice to read this eccentric author.
In this book, hunger is actually Amélie Nothomb. She recounts some moments of her life (early childhood, teenage life, early womanhood), describing her hunger. Hunger for food, for love, for knowledge, for recognition, etc.
As usual with this author, her book is very entertaining.

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sofiaga
The Life of Hunger | Amelie Nothomb
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New bag , new books.