The Life of Hunger
Author | Amélie Nothomb |
---|---|
Original title | Biographie de la faim |
Language | English translated from French language |
Genre | Novel |
Publication date | 2004 |
Publication place | France |
Media type | |
Preceded by | Antichrista |
Followed by | Sulphuric Acid |
The Life of Hunger (French: Biographie de la faim) is a novel by Belgian author Amélie Nothomb. It was first published in 2004.
Resume
"The inhabitants of Vanuatu have never been hungry." They don't know the feelings that hunger causes as everything is within their reach. As a result, they become idle. Amélie exists in a permanent state of starvation. She tries by any means to overcome the emptiness which defines her (see The Character of Rain). She intoxicates herself by observing the World's beauty; the hills beyond her Japanese garden, her sister's beauty, the gentleness of her nanny's hugs, the drunken rush from races, or an internal journey into emptiness. Or simply by filling up with water: Potomania. Amélie is obsessed by hunger. It dominates her life. Can she resist this servitude or will anorexia be her downfall?[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
References
- ^ Independant.co.uk, “Nothomb: Memoir of a megalomaniac”, July 14, 2006
- ^ Complete-review
- ^ The Guardian.com, Michèle Roberts, August 12, 2006
- ^ Telegraph.co.uk, "A writer's life Amélie Nothomb" by Jasper Rees, 23 Jul 2006
- ^ Scotsman "Feeding a teenager's appetite for knowledge" 09 July, 2006
- ^ Telegraph.co.uk , Carol Ann Duffy , "The God in chocolate things", 02 Jul, 2006
- ^ Sydney Morning Heraald, John Hughes, "A voracious appetite for the magic of childhood", October 28, 2006