The Familia Grande: A Memoir

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Product Details
Price
$24.00  $22.32
Publisher
Other Press (NY)
Publish Date
Pages
224
Dimensions
5.8 X 8.1 X 0.7 inches | 0.8 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781635422122

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About the Author
Camille Kouchner was born in 1975 in Paris. She is a senior lecturer at the University of Paris with a specialization in labor law. The Familia Grande is her English-language debut.

Adriana Hunter studied French and Drama at the University of London. She has translated more than ninety books, including Marc Petitjean's The Heart: Frida Kahlo in Paris and Hervé Le Tellier's The Anomaly and Eléctrico W, winner of the French-American Foundation's 2013 Translation Prize in Fiction. She lives in Kent, England.
Reviews
"A book whose tale of incest and abuse is also the unsparing portrait of a prominent French family...breathtaking...powerful." --New York Times

"Free of voyeurism and elegantly written, The Familia Grande is...an artistic success." --New York Times Book Review

"[Kouchner's] memoir...sent shock waves into the heart of the French establishment...Her style is raw, breathless; she doesn't pull any punches." --The Guardian

"[A] moving, elegantly written memoir...A cathartic, blisteringly candid family portrait of abuse, dysfunction, and eventual epiphany." --Kirkus Reviews

"Kouchner risks it all by confronting the truth about her family and her stepfather's abuse...[She] writes in poetically short sentences, paragraphs, and chapters, helping to soften the raw and difficult subject matter." --Booklist

"Powerful...[Kouchner] paints a vivid picture of life growing up in a family of champagne socialists." --Sunday Times (UK)

"[Kouchner] blaz[es] a trail with words, without a single superfluous sentence. The Familia Grande is a shocking account of the mechanisms of control and stifled speech, but above all a poignant and posthumous declaration of love to [her] mother." --France-Amérique

"Camille Kouchner's chilling memoir brings to light the incredible violence embedded in the discourse of sexual freedom (as happy, transparent, and consensual) that flourished in a certain segment of French society since the 1970s. Her book, however, also offers us a beautiful reflection on transgenerational trauma, as Kouchner recounts her struggle to prevent the transmission of abuse, silence, and shame, literally but also metaphorically." --Camille Robcis, author of Disalienation: Politics, Philosophy, and Radical Psychiatry in Postwar France

"The Familia Grande is an artfully written, illuminating, and haunting memoir, reminiscent of Kathryn Harrison's The Kiss. Camille Kouchner dared to break the silence of her life, and by doing so has created a memorable and moving masterpiece." --Chloe Caldwell, author of The Red Zone: A Love Story

"A lucid, universal account of the unspeakable...extraordinarily powerful and emotional." --Elle (France)