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Overview
Here in its American debut edition, Loving Sabotage is the remarkable second novel by young Belgian literary phenomenon Amelie Nothomb. "I lived everything during these three years: heroism, glory, treachery, love, indifference, suffering, humiliation. It was in China, I was seven years old." So announces the narrator of Loving Sabotage, Amelie Nothomb's critically acclaimed novel about a young girl who seems already stripped of illusions. The daughter of diplomats posted to Peking for three years in the mid-seventies, our unnamed narrator charges about her tightly enclosed world of the concrete ghetto of San Li Tun on her "horse" -- her bicycle -- with the dictatorial clarity and loneliness of a warrior-philosopher. "From puberty onwards," she announces at one point, "life is just an epilogue." On the battlefield of an asphalt playground, in between "wars" with the children of other nations, she discovers her first love: six-year-old Elena, her coldly indifferent "Helen of Troy." But she soon learns life's hardest rule: if she wants to be loved, she must be cruel in return. A fast, furious -- and often hilarious -- novel of childhood infatuation and intuited truths, Loving Sabotage chronicles one girl's precocious understanding of the struggles and pains of adult life.Synopsis
Here in its American debut edition, Loving Sabotage is the remarkable second novel by young Belgian literary phenomenon Amelie Nothomb. "I lived everything during these three years: heroism, glory, treachery, love, indifference, suffering, humiliation. It was in China, I was seven years old." So announces the narrator of Loving Sabotage, Amelie Nothomb's critically acclaimed novel about a young girl who seems already stripped of illusions. The daughter of diplomats posted to Peking for three years in the mid-seventies, our unnamed narrator charges about her tightly enclosed world of the concrete ghetto of San Li Tun on her "horse" -- her bicycle -- with the dictatorial clarity and loneliness of a warrior-philosopher. "From puberty onwards," she announces at one point, "life is just an epilogue." On the battlefield of an asphalt playground, in between "wars" with the children of other nations, she discovers her first love: six-year-old Elena, her coldly indifferent "Helen of Troy." But she soon learns life's hardest rule: if she wants to be loved, she must be cruel in return. A fast, furious -- and often hilarious -- novel of childhood infatuation and intuited truths, Loving Sabotage chronicles one girl's precocious understanding of the struggles and pains of adult life.
Complete Review
[O]ne marvelous little book....one of the best books about childhood we can recall, and we recommend it very, very highly.
Editorials
Ben Dickinson
[Nothomb's] acidic yet passionately romantic view of human nature is on full display... —ElleComplete Review
[O]ne marvelous little book....one of the best books about childhood we can recall, and we recommend it very, very highly.Corinna Lothar
[A] delight to read. —Washington TimesDavid Finkle
A charming, devious little book.— Trenton Times
David Finkle
A charming, devious little book. —Trenton TimesElle
[Nothomb's] acidic yet passionately romantic view of human nature is on full display...Lynn Harnett
Hilarious and fierce, Nothomb captures the essence of childhood—its self-centered preoccupation, seriousness and joy. —Herald Sunday PortsmouthReview of Contemporary Fiction
Nothomb is certainly victorious. Not only is the story compelling, the prose is exceptional.Sandra MacPhearson
[A]ble to convey the world of the young in spry and delightful ways. —and the HumanitiesSandra MacPhearson
[A]ble to convey the world of the young in spry and delightful ways.— Review of Arts, Lit, Philosophy, and the Humanities