The Woman Who Waited Explained

The Woman Who Waited
Author:Andreï Makine
Title Orig:La femme qui attendait
Translator:Geoffrey Strachan
Country:France
Language:French
Publisher:Éditions du Seuil
Pub Date:1 January 2004
English Pub Date:1 March 2006
Pages:216
Isbn:9782020637435

The Woman Who Waited is a 2004 novel by the French writer Andreï Makine. It is set in the 1970s and tells the story of a 26-year-old man who falls in love with a woman who still is faithful to her fiancé who went missing in World War II.

Reception

Elena Seymenliyska of The Guardian called the novel "achingly beautiful" and described it as "rich in symbolism and swathed in enigmatic lyricism".[1] The New York Times Andrey Slivka called it "an entertaining story about love, the onset of maturity, the moral complications of cultural dissidence and Soviet life as it was lived in a northern corner of the empire", and wrote that it "manages to treat its themes in a beautifully readable manner".[2] Publishers Weekly wrote that Makine "transforms a very simple premise into a richly textured story of love and loss".[3]

The book received the 2005 Prince Pierre Literary Prize.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Seymenliyska. Elena. 2006-04-29. A place of melancholy mists. The Guardian. 2018-03-04.
  2. Web site: Slivka. Andrey. 2006-03-19. The Waiting Game. The New York Times. 2018-03-04.
  3. Web site: 2006-01-16. Fiction Book Review: The Woman Who Waited by Andrei Makine. Publishers Weekly. 2018-03-04.
  4. Web site: The Prince Pierre Literary Prize: Winner 2005. Prince Pierre Foundation. 2018-03-04.