Self-Portrait in Green: 10th Anniversary Edition

Author:   Marie Ndiaye ,  Jordan Stump
Publisher:   Two Lines Press
ISBN:  

9781949641486


Pages:   110
Publication Date:   12 September 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Self-Portrait in Green: 10th Anniversary Edition


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Overview

Who are the green women? They are powerful (one is a disciplinarian teacher). They are mysterious (one haunts a house like a ghost). They are seductive (one marries her best friend's father). And they are unbearably personal (one is the author's own mother). They are all aspects of their creator: Marie NDiaye, an author celebrated worldwide as one of France's leading writers. Here, in her own skewed take on the memoir, NDiaye combs through all the menacing, beguiling, and revelatory memories submerged beneath the consciousness of a singular literary talent. Mysterious, honest, and unabashedly innovative, NDiaye's self-portrait forces us all to ask questions--about what we repress, how we discover those things, and how those obsessions become us. This 10th anniversary hardcover edition of Marie NDiaye's genre-defying classic restores photographs that appeared in the original French edition alongside Jordan Stump's dazzling translation, revealing in English, at last, the complete vision of NDiaye's influential masterpiece.

Full Product Details

Author:   Marie Ndiaye ,  Jordan Stump
Publisher:   Two Lines Press
Imprint:   Two Lines Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 20.60cm
Weight:   0.272kg
ISBN:  

9781949641486


ISBN 10:   1949641481
Pages:   110
Publication Date:   12 September 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Reviews

"Winner of the 2015 CLMP Firecracker Award for Creative Nonfiction Named one of Flavorwire's Best Novels of 2014 ""This novel not only seems to change each time I return to it, but also to shape-shift during the act of reading. An adult woman with young children, the narrator is at once detached from and vividly connected to her surroundings, never more so when encountering one of the 'women in green' that haunt her past, present and future. The women in green are a slippery, diffuse category--beautiful, glamorous, dangerous--which the narrator is both afraid of and bewitched by."" --Daisy Lafarge, author of Paul ""One of the most mysterious, spectral, appealing and uncategorizable books I've ever read."" --Amina Cain, author of A Horse at Night ""[A] master of haunted, tilted, postcolonial worlds backlit by a kind of fever logic....I'm not much one for listing favorites, but if you twisted my arm, NDiaye is probably one of the first names I'd give up."" --Jessi Jezewska Stevens, author of The Visitors ""[NDiaye] blurs herself into her hallucinatory descriptions of these women, posing the question: What is the difference between what we observe and what we experience? The terrifying conclusion could be just as unsettling: no such line exists."" --Jac Jemc, author of False Bingo ""Marie NDiaye is a master of creating menacing, off-kilter worlds that speak to the truth of human experience."" --Ayşegül Savas, author of White on White ""NDiaye, who received France's most prestigious literary prize...may be that nation's most startling new literary voice."" --Publishers Weekly, starred review ""[NDiaye] is increasingly--and justly--recognized as a major world writer."" --Rain Taxi Review of Books ""[NDiaye's] is a unique voice among other contemporary French writers, and her fictional vision both intricate and distinctive. She is an example of exactly the kind of non-Anglophone writer who should have already been translated in full. Hopefully, this new translation will renew interest in her work, prompt further translations, and give English readers the chance to experience her entire contribution to world letters."" --The Rumpus ""Compelling and tightly written....Rather like a Francis Bacon triptych, there is nothing fixed, comforting, or coherent about the narrator's identity or idea of herself, but the image she projects is incredibly vivid.... [NDiaye's] prose reads effortlessly in Jordan Stump's fine translation."" --Times Literary Supplement ""It's a book that, once read, leaves you wondering what to think about it...knowing...you had a thought-provoking evening."" --Minneapolis Star Tribune ""[W]ades through feminine fear, power, and insecurity like no other book I've encountered."" --Flavorwire"


Winner of the 2015 CLMP Firecracker Award for Creative Nonfiction Named one of Flavorwire's Best Novels of 2014 This novel not only seems to change each time I return to it, but also to shape-shift during the act of reading. An adult woman with young children, the narrator is at once detached from and vividly connected to her surroundings, never more so when encountering one of the 'women in green' that haunt her past, present and future. The women in green are a slippery, diffuse category--beautiful, glamorous, dangerous--which the narrator is both afraid of and bewitched by. --Daisy Lafarge, author of Paul One of the most mysterious, spectral, appealing and uncategorizable books I've ever read. --Amina Cain, author of A Horse at Night [A] master of haunted, tilted, postcolonial worlds backlit by a kind of fever logic....I'm not much one for listing favorites, but if you twisted my arm, NDiaye is probably one of the first names I'd give up. --Jessi Jezewska Stevens, author of The Visitors [NDiaye] blurs herself into her hallucinatory descriptions of these women, posing the question: What is the difference between what we observe and what we experience? The terrifying conclusion could be just as unsettling: no such line exists. --Jac Jemc, author of False Bingo Marie NDiaye is a master of creating menacing, off-kilter worlds that speak to the truth of human experience. --Aysegul Savas, author of White on White NDiaye, who received France's most prestigious literary prize...may be that nation's most startling new literary voice. --Publishers Weekly, starred review [NDiaye] is increasingly--and justly--recognized as a major world writer. --Rain Taxi Review of Books [NDiaye's] is a unique voice among other contemporary French writers, and her fictional vision both intricate and distinctive. She is an example of exactly the kind of non-Anglophone writer who should have already been translated in full. Hopefully, this new translation will renew interest in her work, prompt further translations, and give English readers the chance to experience her entire contribution to world letters. --The Rumpus Compelling and tightly written....Rather like a Francis Bacon triptych, there is nothing fixed, comforting, or coherent about the narrator's identity or idea of herself, but the image she projects is incredibly vivid.... [NDiaye's] prose reads effortlessly in Jordan Stump's fine translation. --Times Literary Supplement It's a book that, once read, leaves you wondering what to think about it...knowing...you had a thought-provoking evening. --Minneapolis Star Tribune [W]ades through feminine fear, power, and insecurity like no other book I've encountered. --Flavorwire


Author Information

Marie NDiaye was born in 1967 in Pithiviers, France. She is the author of around twenty novels, plays, collections of stories, and nonfiction books, which have been translated into numerous languages. She's received the Prix Femina and the Prix Goncourt, France's highest literary honor, and her plays are in the repertoire of the Comédie-Française. Jordan Stump is a professor of French at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, the author of two book-length studies of the writing of Raymond Queneau (Naming and Unnaming and The Other Book), and the translator of some thirty works of mostly contemporary French fiction, by such authors as Marie NDiaye, Scholastique Mukasonga, Eric Chevillard, and Marie Redonnet. His translation of Marie NDiaye's The Cheffe won the American Literary Translators' Association prize for prose in 2020.

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