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My Life as Edgar

Contributor(s): Fabre, Dominique (Author), Lehmann, Anna (Translator)

ISBN: 9781953861481

Publisher: Archipelago Books

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Pub Date: May 16, 2023

Dewey: 843.914

LCCN: 2022031941

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.63" H x 6.38" L x 5.28" W ( 0.55 lbs) 198 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: "A sensitive portrait of one boy's travels from earliest consciousness through his salad days in the countryside and onward by a "genius" of "nuanced interior moments" (Los Angeles Times). Edgar loves nothing more than listening to the birds in the trees, the squeaking of moles in nearby chalk quarries, the conversations trickling out of the carpeted offices surrounding his favorite park in the suburbs of Paris. He also listens to the hushed conversations of passersby, strangers who whisper that he is "not all there." But what constitutes the supposedly insufficient character of Edgar's interior life? Dominique Fabre gives himself over to Edgar's way of seeing, his sensitivity, his innocence and wisdom, his longings and perceptions, his tentative interpolations into the social fabric of 1960s France, and in each passage we find a stirring answer"--

Review Quotes: "A sort of savant, somewhat developmentally disabled but clairvoyant, Edgar spends the first years of his life with his divorced mother, then is sent to a foster family in Savoie . . . Sensitive, innocent, and wise, he has an unusual sense of humor that shows the inverted world in which he lives . . . Fabre's tale . . . carries an important message: saving language and culture from oblivion is one important way to repair the world."
--Alice-Catherine Carls, World Literature Today

"Edgar, for all his concerns about the gaps in his memory, is an endearing child trying to tell his own story as best he can. In the process, he unwittingly tells a much larger tale about the lives of children whose parents are unable, or unwilling, to care for them, the systems in which they find themselves--day homes, boarding schools and foster families--and the value of consistency and support, wherever one may find it."
--Joseph Schrieber, Rough Ghosts

"As a narrator, Edgar is as compelling as he is frank in his self-revelations. His thoughts follow no logic and range quickly between topics about which he assumes the addressee - the psychiatrist who first assessed him at the age of three - has full understanding. Equally, sudden flashes of information unintentionally disclose the poignancy of his life . . . However, this striking, original novel never plays Edgar's plight for pathos. Instead, through the resourceful use of fiction's possibilities, we discover a bitter form of truth." -- Declan O'Driscoll, The Irish Times

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