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Everyone

Everyone

General Fiction

(france) Jean-paul Dubois

113K0

A representative work by Jean-Paul Dubois, the laureate of contemporary French literature, and a winner of the Prix Goncourt. The French version has sold more than 700,000 copies, and the copyright has been sold to 30 countries and regions. Literal translation of the original text by the well-known translator Huang Xing. In despair and humor, he depicts the slow collapse of ordinary people's lives and soothes every wound of a failed life. "Don't judge my life, it's been a mess at times, but there's nothing to regret." "I've made two mistakes, and both times I ended up being kicked out. You're going to learn some unpleasant things about me in the future. They're all true. This time, I can't do anything for myself either. Justification. Soon, my past will become the object of criticism and condemnation at your leisure. But I still hope that you can remember this simple saying that my father often said to excuse everyone's mistakes: Everyone lives in the world differently. "

A French Life

A French Life

General Fiction

(france) Jean-paul Dubois

197K0

A masterpiece by Jean-Paul Dubois, winner of the Prix Goncourt, and winner of the Femina Prize. Give me a moment to surrender to life gracefully. Accurately depicts the loss and sobriety, loneliness and lust of contemporary people. "At that time, I was eight years old and my brother was less than ten years old. He always patiently told me about the changes in the adult world while protecting me from its vicissitudes." "I was twenty-four years old, with a weird diploma in my pocket and a distorted view of this charcoal-black world. This year, Picasso died, and my young life was chaotic and disorderly, like the most Cubist style of his paintings." "I. I had just turned thirty-eight, stuck in a respectable marriage, and my children didn't trust me. I always thought I could resist the temptation and pressure of social discipline, but now I realize that, like everyone else, I have been trapped in it. "My name is Paul Blico, and I am fifty-four years old. I take my medicine on time, live alone, eat dinner alone, grow old alone, and try to stay in touch with my children..."