Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 8 reviews on
Named a Best Book of the Year by Vogue, BBC, and Hudson Booksellers
A New Yorker Recommended Read of the Year
An autobiographical novel from Édouard Louis, hailed as one of the most important voices of his generation--about social class, transformation, and the perils of leaving the past behind.
One question took center stage in my life, it focused all my thoughts and occupied every moment when I was alone with myself: how could I get this revenge, by what means? I tried everything.
Édouard Louis longs for a life beyond the poverty, discrimination, and violence in his working-class hometown--so he sets out for school in Amiens and, later, university in Paris. He sheds the provincial "Eddy" for an elegant new name, determined to eradicate every aspect of his past. He reads incessantly, he dines with aristocrats, he spends nights with millionaires and drug dealers alike. Everything he does is motivated by a single obsession: to become someone else. At once harrowing and profound, Change is not just a personal odyssey, a story of dreams and of "the beautiful violence of being torn away," but a vividly rendered portrait of a society divided by class, power, and inequality.
"In Change, Louis razes his own psyche with the same unsparing ferocity that he applied to revealing every squalid detail, every act of brutality, every note of despair in The End of Eddy."
"The book ends not with triumph, but exhaustion and resignation. It is this that gives its lasting power: the realisation that a hero’s journey only makes sense if the hero has a home to return to, and while a person might be capable of love, a persona is only capable of praise."
"What redeems the book is Louis’s awareness, in retrospect, of his egotism. A powerful note of self-scepticism – the older Louis looking askance at his striving younger self – runs through the story.."
Advance Praise
"With frank prose and staggering insights, Louis makes the story of his metamorphosis feel vital and alive. This is irresistible."
--Publisher's Weekly (starred review)
"Édouard Louis is a master in the poetics of juxtaposition, elucidating the hostile and the intimate, the murky and the pure, the vulnerable and the resilient, the changeable and unchangeable of the world with his brilliant and preternatural intelligence. Change is a poignant and compelling read!"
--Yiyun Li, author of Wednesday's Child
"I feel so lucky to be living and writing at the same time as Édouard Louis. Reading the urgent, unspooling prose of Change--Louis's latest account of a motley life lived so far--fills me with admiration and inspiration, as well as renewed faith in writing itself, and the value of paying persistent, pellucid attention to our relations, desires, histories, and selves."
--Maggie Nelson, author of On Freedom