EBOOK

This Tilting World

Colette Fellous
(0)
Pages
160
Year
2019
Language
English

About

On the night following the terrorist attack that killed thirty-eight tourists on the beach at Sousse, a woman sits facing the sea and writes a complicated love letter to her homeland, Tunisia, which she feels she must leave forever. She also writes of her personal tragedies-the deaths of her father, a quiet man, and of another lifelong friend, who just weeks ago died at sea, having forsaken the writing that had given his life meaning. Part of a trilogy on the history of Tunisia's Jewish community, Fellous's story nods to Proust and encompasses a multitude of colorful portraits, sweeping readers onto a lyrical journey from Tunisia to Paris to a Flaubertian village in Normandy, full of the voices of loved ones now silent. Written with echoes of Roland Barthes's gorgeous fragmentary texts, such as A Lover's Discourse and Camera Lucida, Fellous's creative memoir is at once a political and cultural portrait of a region that has sat at the center of world history for millennia, as well as a search into her own memory, emotions, and family history.

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Reviews

"Colette Fellous isn't lacking an address, but has two homelands: her birthplace, Tunisia, and her language, French. Between them is an arc, a tension, an energy: that of a double belonging which does not alienate but provides an opening."
Le Monde
"[Fellous] enchants with her way of capturing emotions, sensations, moments, and people. She elegantly opens the doors to the past."
Livres Hebdo
". . . a reflection-sensitive and honest-on our present, this impossible present, this threshold between yesterday and a complex future, where we 'see also how our life was entirely manufactured by the political history, even though we thought it belonged to us, that it was 'personal."
Diacritik

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