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Chez Moi Print E-mail
Thursday, 12 June 2008
Chez Moi
by Agnès Desarthe, translated by Adriana Hunter

Penguin 2008: 257 pp., paperback.
Village Voice €13, Your French News Price €12

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Though she is no red-head, Myriam, the narrator of ‘Mangez-Moi’, a novel first published in French in 2006 and now available in translation under the timorous title ‘Chez Moi’, has one thing in common with Andrew Greig’s heroine Kirsty Fowler: she’s a bundle of contradictions. As the novel opens, she’s in trouble, with no money, no place to stay except the hole-in-the-wall restaurant she has just opened in what is clearly one of the less fashionable areas of Paris.
Against all odds, she makes a success of her none too salubrious bistrot de quartier, mainly thanks to her appealing combination of courage and vulnerability – she’s emotionally crippled by the memory of a spot of misbehaving so shameful it takes her 100 pages to get around to confessing it. Her pluck and funk make her irresistible to all who come into contact with her, among them a political-science student who moonlights as a waiter, an amorous florist, and a North African market-gardener who supplies her with the ingredients of her inventive cooking.
The goodwill surrounding the forty-some year-old Myriam, whose only way of expressing love was preparing food, ends up bringing her heart out of its coma. At the conclusion of this charming, chatty, unpretentious work of fiction we understand that she is at last ready to savour life. A stove has reasons reason doesn't know about, as Pascal didn’t say.
 
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