Sascha Welter reviewed L'Amant by Marguerite Duras
Not smut ... but the misery of colonialism
3 stars
An intense book. If you started this book because you heard about the smut (or saw the movie with lots of skin), you will be disappointed.
What is really intense is all the misery, the misery of the family, the misery of this love that exists only in a grotesque parody, the misery of the boarding schools. Above all and defining all this, the misery of colonialism. Colonialism that heaps misery on the local people, but also onto the people sent there to "administer" that colony or who try to get their personal gain in this all and simply find their banal inconsequential life.
A lot of "stream of consciousness" writing. It took me a while to keep me from trying to "keep in mind" what exactly was happening and when, and instead let myself drift in the stream. I found the book to be ending on a slightly positive …
An intense book. If you started this book because you heard about the smut (or saw the movie with lots of skin), you will be disappointed.
What is really intense is all the misery, the misery of the family, the misery of this love that exists only in a grotesque parody, the misery of the boarding schools. Above all and defining all this, the misery of colonialism. Colonialism that heaps misery on the local people, but also onto the people sent there to "administer" that colony or who try to get their personal gain in this all and simply find their banal inconsequential life.
A lot of "stream of consciousness" writing. It took me a while to keep me from trying to "keep in mind" what exactly was happening and when, and instead let myself drift in the stream. I found the book to be ending on a slightly positive thought ... but honestly that could be disputed.