A Dangerous Liaisons for our times, Who You Think I Am exposes the disconnect between fantasy and reality. Social media allows us to put ourselves on display, to indulge in secrets, but above all to lie, to recreate a life, to become our own fiction--magnifying and manipulating the double standards to which older women are held when they refuse to give up on desire.
Simultaneously sensual, intellectually stimulating, and utterly relevant, this page-turner will stick in your mind long after reading.
Adriana Hunter studied French and Drama at the University of London. She has translated more than fifty books including Nelly Alard's Couple Mechanics and Eléctrico W by Hervé Le Tellier (winner of the French-American Foundation's 2013 Translation Prize in Fiction). She won the 2011 Scott Moncrieff Prize, and her work has been shortlisted twice for the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. She lives in Norfolk, England.
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for all of those people (correctly) enjoying juliette binoche in #TheStaircase, may I recommend WHO YOU THINK I AM? she is excellent in it! it is on prime! you can read my review if you do not believe me! https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/movies/story/2021-09-02/review-juliette-binoche-who-you-think-i-am
"Readers might think they know where the plot is going, but Laurens uses several sly shifts in perspective to upend the story as she questions the nature and longevity of female desire and desirability in this timely and astute novel." -BOOKLIST
"Do novelists construct avatars to clarify and shroud the truth simultaneously? Do we all? Prix Femina award winner Laurens (In His Arms) deftly investigates these questions...a well-constructed example of literary/commercial crossover that will prickle readers." -LIBRARY JOURNAL
"A harrowing and challenging book that questions the nature of control in an age of digital obsession...exploitative and haunting...Laurens, as translated from French into English by Adriana Hunter, excels at creating an at once expansive and hyperfocused narrative. The reader gets the sense they are watching a caged animal, both observing and forcing her to be observed. The line between willingly giving up her story and being forced to is thin, and as Claire vacillates between reveling in the opportunity to explain and feeling cornered, the reader's role shifts from audience to antagonist. Combined with the plot's twists and turns, the net effect is a complex interrogation of the place of women in society--and the role of social media in giving us the illusion of control." -WORLD LITERATURE TODAY
"In this ingenious and intelligent novel, Camille Laurens revisits, like a virtuoso in the virtual world, a romantic encounter." --ELLE (France)
Who You Think I Am--Le Monde des livres
"Camille Laurens enjoys exploring love, especially the foreplay and the fallout." --Le Figaro littéraire