Boookworms’s Weblog


Céline Giraud, J’ai été volée à mes parents by boookworms
mars 23, 2008, 4:24
Filed under: Novel

A woman’s life can fall down in few seconds. Céline Giraud a Peruvian girl, aged 25 and , discovers the unthinkable. When she was just a baby, she had been rapted from her parents 16 days after her birth by thieves.
They were members of child traffic. Céline knew she was adopted by a french family, but she tought, as her adoptive parents, that her biologic mother had abandonned her because she couldn’t rear her own daughter.
Céline makes an investigation to find her biologic parents an the men who rapted her. In Peru, she meets a poor family, her own family. Then she warns up the police station and gives all the details of this child traffic and the name of the 24 children rapted.
In her book Céline Giraud tells us her incredible travel, from France to Peru, but also from her mother to her biologic mother living in a ghetto.



Ni d’Eve, ni d’Adam by boookworms
mars 17, 2008, 10:41
Filed under: Novel
 Ni d’Eve,ni d’adam
Amélie Nothomb, Ni d’Eve, ni d’Adam

In her new novel Ni d’Eve, ni d’Adam  Amélie Nothomb, who wan French Academy Price, turns back to Japan, with its wonderful landscape and her very first love story.

Amélie Nothomb’s fan will be pleased ! Her 16th novel, published inseptember 2007 tells us her very first love. The scene takes place in modern Japan where Amélie Nothomb was born. It is also an opportunity for her to analyse her writing obsession. She writes since she was 17.  It is her confession, her verdict, but above all, her life ! Since that day, she publishes one novel the year. His first success, “” was translated to 37 languages. Then, she waited until last September to write a part of her autobiography, two loves, Japan memories and Rinri, a japan guy. 17 years waiting for such details !
“A love story, it takes time to digest !” says Amélie Nothomb. 17 years digesting it ! What a fat meat ! Or what a strong love story…
“it’s the very first time I felt respected” she says. You have to know how respect is a important quality in Japan.

Sometimes spectator, sometimes actress, she tells us what are the love rites in Japan, highlighting what is comic or artificial for occidental people. Come back to Japan was something like a therapy curing her personal problems and illness.