Reader Score
76%
76% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 5 reviews on
Barbara Molinard (1921-1986) wrote and wrote, but published only one book: a collection of short stories titled Viens. Everything she wrote, she immediately tore up, and it was only through the relentless urging from her husband, the filmmaker Patrice Molinard, and her friend Marguerite Duras, that she finally handed over a single collection of stories to Editions Mercure de France in 1969.
Emma Ramadan is an educator and literary translator from French. She is the recipient of the PEN Translation Prize, the Albertine Prize, an NEA Fellowship, and a Fulbright. Her translations include Abdellah Taïa's A Country for Dying, Virginie Despentes's Pretty Things, and Barbara Molinard's Panics.
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"I realized that from behind the walls of my bedroom, those men were spying on me." Read an excerpt from Barbara Molinard's Panics, translated by @EmKateRam. https://t.co/yZts5kihJR
"Through Ramadan’s spare and exacting translation, Molinard presents a terrifying portrait of violence and mental illness. The reader is immersed entirely in the minds of her characters, seeing the world only through their warped gazes…"
The international magazine of literature, in print and online.
“The thirteen stories in Panics — rendered into beautiful, plainspoken English by translator Emma Ramadan, and by turns surreal, mesmerizing, and darkly unhinged —bear the mark of their writer’s beleaguered process.” @Maya_Solovej on Barbara Molinard. https://t.co/PNpBcjsQRT