Nicolas Mathieu was born in pinal, France, in 1978. His first
novel, Aux animaux la guerre, was published in 2014 and adapted for
television by Alain Tasma in 2018. He is the author of And Their
Children After Them (Other Press, 2020), for which he received the
Goncourt Prize, France's most prestigious literary award, and Rose
Royal (Other Press, 2022). He lives in Nancy.
Sam Taylor is an award-winning literary translator and novelist. He
has translated more than sixty books from French, including Laurent
Binet's HHhH and Leila Slimani's The Perfect Nanny, and his four
novels have been translated into ten languages. He was born in
England, spent ten years in France, and now lives in the United
States.
“Connemara illuminates a clash of values and visions in
contemporary France…Mathieu knows how to take us from a small-town
hockey match to a corporate boardroom.” —New York Times Book
Review
“A French woman’s midlife crisis sets her off on a quest to recover
the spirit of her youth in this pulsing novel of desire…Mathieu
makes life’s emotional precariousness and fading glory palpable.”
—Publishers Weekly
“In Connemara, Nicolas Mathieu weaves magic out of the everyday and
brilliantly evokes and explores the things that unite and divide
us. It’s a beautiful book about aging and mortality, work and
parenthood, nostalgia and yearning, and contemporary life in a
changing France. A masterful study of human frailty. Mathieu is one
of my favorite writers, and Sam Taylor’s translation is elegant.”
—William Boyle, author of Shoot the Moonlight Out, City of Margins,
and Gravesend
“Connemara is a flawless pas de deux between the incandescence of
adolescence and the tremors of midlife desires, and is also an
intimate commentary on the social anxieties of success that are
twined with the complexities of class. Nicolas Mathieu is a master
in tracing the flattening forces of neoliberalism on small towns
everywhere.” —Kerri Arsenault, author of Mill Town: Reckoning
with What Remains
Ask a Question About this Product More... |