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The Art of Losing
The Art of Losing: A Novel | Alice Zeniter
5 posts | 4 read | 2 reading | 6 to read
A gripping, multigenerational tale of a French Algerian woman reckoning with her family's secret past and the inescapable legacies of colonialism Naïma’s family comes from Algeria, but she knows it only from what she experiences in her grandparents’ tiny apartment in Normandy: the food her grandmother cooks, the precious things they carried when they fled. Naïma’s father claims to remember nothing, has made himself French. But now, one of them is going back; Naïma will see for herself what was left behind—including the family secrets. How do we protect our families and choose the right side of war, revolution? What price will our descendants pay for the choices we make? Will they judge us fairly? During the War for Algerian Independence, Naïma’s grandfather went from being the wealthy owner of a olive grove to an immigrant scratching out a living in France. Her search reveals how the battle against colonial rule reshaped communities, created deep rifts within families, and let the whims of whoever might be in power instantly overturn the lives of ordinary people. Alice Zeniter’s The Art of Losing is a powerful, moving family novel that spans three generations, across seventy years and two shores of the Mediterranean Sea. It is a resonant, accessible history of Algeria and the diaspora through the people who lived it. It is also the story of how we carry on in the face of loss: loss of a country, identity, language, connection. And it is, ultimately, an immersive, unforgettable excavation of the personal legacies of colonialism, immigration, and war.
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mirnas
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Pickpick

An excellent novel on immigration, (post)colonialism, identity, memory, aculturation, belonging and France and Algeria's conflictual relationship. Naïma, main character, a French woman of Algerian origins, tries to understand why her grandparents left their homeland in 1962 and never went back.

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Pinta
L'Art de perdre | Alice Zeniter
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Effective language, not overly sentimental or sensational in a story with plenty of political, social & physical violence. Zeniter stops to observe the landscape with a newcomer‘s eye: the heavy skies of Normandy compared to the bright sun of the Algerian mountains. Thoughtful & straightforward depictions of migrants‘ pride, shame, confusion, fear, loss. The rifts that occur in migrant families with different languages & childhood landscapes.

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Pinta
L'Art de perdre | Alice Zeniter
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Pickpick

Family saga over three generations, migration from Algeria to ??: Ali, who flees the mountain olive groves of Kabylia in 1962 when violence threatens families of the Harkis, his son Hamid who straddles the two worlds as they settle in a migrant camp in Provence, then move north, & Parisian Naïma, who feels removed from her roots & researches family in a return to Algeria. Language, culture, marginalization, family, adaptation, strength. ? 2017