6.4 /10 1 Votes6.4
Country France Publication date 20 August 2009 ISBN 978-0857050564 Published in english 26 April 2012 | 3.2/5 Published in English 26 April 2012 Originally published 20 August 2009 Publisher Éditions Gallimard | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Original title Trois Femmes puissantes Similar Prix Goncourt winners, Other books |
Book review three strong women by marie ndiaye
Three Strong Women (French: Trois Femmes puissantes) (2009) is a novel by the French writer Marie NDiaye. It won the 2009 Prix Goncourt, France's most prestigious literary award. The English translation by John Fletcher was published in April 2012 in the UK by MacLehose Press, and in August 2012 by Knopf in the USA.
Contents
- Book review three strong women by marie ndiaye
- Marie ndiaye laur ate du prix goncourt s exprime dans interlignes sur trois femmes puissantes
- Summary
- Awards and honours
- References
According to the description by Maya Jaggi in The Guardian: "Moving mainly between France and Senegal, this novel explores survival, inheritance and the feared repetition of history – within families, as between peoples. Its three heroines have an unassailable sense of their own self-worth, while their psychological battles have an almost mythic resonance."
Marie ndiaye laur ate du prix goncourt s exprime dans interlignes sur trois femmes puissantes
Summary
The novel is composed of three accounts and is a history of three women, Norah, Fanta and Khady, who reject humiliation and embrace life. The unifying theme is that they are threatened or abandoned by men.
The first story is inspired in part by Ndiaye's own life, and is built around the departure of a Senegalese father from France, taking with him only son Sunny, and abandoning his wife and daughters (Ndiaye's Senegalese father left when she was 1, in a a similar way). One daughter, Norah, now married and with children of her own and working as a lawyer in Paris. She is summoned to Dakar by her absent father, supposedly a successful businessman. On arrival, she discovers her brother Sunny is in prison for the alleged murder of his stepmother, and the father - who she still fears and dislikes - wants her to defend him in court. He is now broke. Sunny then alleges from prison that his father was actually the murder, leaving Norah to challenge her father....but the account ends there.
The second story takes place in the Gironde in France (where Marie Ndiaye actually owns a house), where Fanta, a teacher, and her academic husband Rudy have a serious argument, and he shouts 'go back where you came from'. This racist remark has repercussions for their relationship. An earlier racist incident in their lives, which led to them fleeing Senegal where he had been teaching in the International School, is revealed. The theme is of patriarchal control, and a life unravelling - as in the first story, control over children is an issue.
The third part returns to a maid, Khady Demba, working in Norah's father's house in Dakar. Despite getting "a minuscule helping of the good things in life" she is nourished by determination, and memories of a caring grandmother. Khady is later widowed and abandoned, and arrives in France after an arduous journey as as a traumatized, clandestine migrant. She knows only Fanta, a distant cousin. The weak man in this tale is a lover who abandons her.