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Self-Portrait in Green
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye
7 posts | 5 read | 13 to read
It seems there is no genre of writing Marie NDiaye will not make her own. Asked to write a memoir, she turned in this paranoid fantasia of rising floodwaters, walking corpses, eerie depictions of her very own parents, and the incessant reappearance of women in green. Just who are these green women? They are powerful (one was NDiayes disciplinarian grade-school teacher). They are mysterious (one haunts a house like a ghost and may be visible only to the author). They are seductive (one stole a friends husband). And they are unbearably personal (one is NDiayes own mother). They are all, in their way, aspects of their creator, at once frightening, menacing, and revealing of everything submerged within the consciousness of this singular literary talent. A courageous, strikingly honest, and unabashedly innovative self-portrait, NDiayes kaleidoscopic look at the women in green is a revelation to us all -- about how we form our identities, how we discover those things we repress, and how our obsessions become us.
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Pinta
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye
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Pickpick

Need more green in your wardrobe? Non-linear narrative w/ a disconcerting core, haunted by women in green. Threats overt & oblique—river overflowing, black shadow creature, doubles of friends, mysterious women in green. Challenges of family life, beautiful descriptions of daily life minutia, but disconcerting at the core. Anchored by evocative photographs that make no sense. Cusk+Sebald? Dreamscape. This is not a memoir. We are all haunted. 2005

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ReadingEnvy
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye
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Mehso-so

This strange little book won an award for creative non-fiction and is what happened when the author Marie Ndiaye was asked for memoir. Between the floodwaters rising and the mysterious women in green, it reads like anything but reality. It was a quicker read I selected for Women in Translation Month. Translated by Jordan Stump, who must have had a puzzle on his hands.⤵️

ReadingEnvy I wonder about women in relation to specific colors. Yellow wallpaper, women in green... I'm guessing this is important. Sometimes I feel like I read but do not understand.
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I know of, but have not read, other books by Ndiaye. Have you? I'm interested to hear if her fiction falls along similar lines.
5y
Lcsmcat What an interesting thought. The symbolism of color could go in so many directions. 5y
merelybookish I read one of her books a while back. You can check out my review on Litsy. 5y
ReadingEnvy @merelybookish ah interesting so perhaps this is just her outlook on life! 5y
49 likes2 stack adds4 comments
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Bertha_Mason
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye

"Against melancholy, against regret, common sense and cynicism can do nothing."

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Bertha_Mason
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye
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charl08 This sounds amazing! 6y
Bertha_Mason It is. It's so dreamlike. 6y
3 likes2 comments
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Bertha_Mason
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye

"All the young women are in shorts and sandals. The sandals‘ soles smack their heels with a certain resolute gaiety. What makes that sensual? Is it the slightly slack strap that lets the foot slip this way and that, and the heel slap the sole?"

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Bertha_Mason
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye

"All the young women are in shorts, because it‘s a shimmering spring morning, and in the amber air there‘s an imperceptible threat of the sweltering summer that will unavoidably follow this season, so mild and at the same time heavy with that warning—it‘s a wall shining bright white in the blazing sun, for example, or a shadeless gravel courtyard I cross through on my way into the town hall...."

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CAGirlReading
Self-Portrait in Green | Marie Ndiaye
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Pickpick

#recommendsday Anything by Marie Ndiaye! This one is my favorite and at only slightly more than 100 pages is a quick read but Ladivine is another one of my favorites!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Garabrandtreviews I loved Ladivine! 7y
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