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Not One Day

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Not One Day, winner of the prestigious Prix Médicis, begins with the maxim: “Not one day without a woman." What follows is renowned Oulipo member Anne Garréta's intimate, erotic, and sometimes bitter collection of memories, written under strict constraints, with each chapter written each day describing a past lover or love, exploring the interaction between memory, fantasy, and desire.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 27, 2017
      From Oulipo member and French author of the genderless love story Sphinx comes a short but deep exploration of the nature and complexity of desire and longing. The newly translated work is laid out like a confessional writing experiment. For five hours each day over the course of a month, Garréta aims to record unedited memories of past romances as she remembers them. The project stretches on for more than a year, and the end result is a series of 12 vignettes that ranges in intensity and focus. The women she describes come in all stripes. There’s C* in the Roman night club, whom she was both attracted to and repulsed by; E*, a boring married novelist who used Garréta to explore extramarital same-sex fantasies; and D*, who sparked a weekend-long spree of orgiastic sex in every position and involving every piece of furniture. In recounting her friendship with the older K*, Garréta realizes for the first time how much she adores and misses her. While the idea of such a collection seems either refreshingly lurid or self-indulgent, Garréta’s prose leans more toward distanced and academic than erotic. Though she asks pressing questions throughout—“How many times have we truly, savagely, imperatively desired a body?”; how do you know if a conquest reciprocates your feelings?; Is it possible to rid yourself of the self?—the book’s final chapter hints at her dissatisfaction with both her methods of inquiry and the answers she’s finally left with.

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  • OverDrive Read
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  • English

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