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Emilie Pine

    January 1, 1977

    Emilie Pine's work delves into themes of personal experience and vulnerability. Her writing is characterized by its unflinching honesty and profound introspection. Pine explores how we can better understand ourselves and connect with others. Her writing offers readers authentic and thought-provoking insights into the human condition.

    Zwei Frauen in Dublin
    Ruth & Pen
    Notes to Self
    My Good Bright Wolf
    • A memoir exploring the complexities of thinking, reading, and the relationship with food, this work reflects on the formative experiences of Sarah Moss's childhood. Growing up, she grappled with societal expectations surrounding the female body and mind, navigating the pressures of 1970s austerity and second-wave feminism. She learned to maintain a slim figure while avoiding vanity, to be intelligent without anger, and to possess practical skills deemed frivolous. Clever girls were encouraged to be ambitious, yet women were expected to remain small. Years later, her struggle with self-control escalated into a medical emergency as her teenage anorexia resurfaced, prompting a confrontation with the denial of her body's needs and her mind's turmoil. This memoir delves into contested memories of girlhood, the relentless voices that influenced her thoughts, and the literature that provided her escape. With its beautiful, audacious, and humorous narrative, this work examines the intricate ways the mind can turn against itself and ultimately find a path to recovery. A compelling exploration of womanhood and resilience, it showcases Moss's compassionate writing about human frailty and the search for identity.

      My Good Bright Wolf
      4.7
    • Notes to Self

      • 192 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      The extraordinary #1 bestseller - a word-of-mouth literary phenomenon 'Do not read this book in public: it will make you cry' Anne Enright 'Every line pulses with the pain and joy and complexity of an extraordinary life' Mark O'Connell 'I am afraid of being the disruptive woman. And of not being disruptive enough. I am afraid. But I am doing it anyway.' In this dazzling debut, Emilie Pine speaks to the business of living as a woman in the 21st century - its extraordinary pain and its extraordinary joy. Courageous, humane and uncompromising, she writes with radical honesty on birth and death, on the grief of infertility, on caring for her alcoholic father, on taboos around female bodies and female pain, on sexual violence and violence against the self. Devastatingly poignant and profoundly wise - and joyful against the odds - Notes to Self offers a portrait not just of its author but of a whole generation.

      Notes to Self
      4.2
    • Ruth & Pen

      • 256 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Dublin, 7 October 2019 One day, one city, two women- Ruth and Pen. Neither known to the other, but both asking themselves the same questions- how to be with others and how, when the world doesn't seem willing to make space for them, to be with themselves? Ruth's marriage to Aidan is in crisis. Today she needs to make a choice - to stay or not to stay, to take the risk of reaching out, or to pull up the drawbridge. For teenage Pen, today is the day the words will flow, and she will speak her truth to Alice, to ask for what she so desperately wants. Deeply involving, poignant and radiantly intelligent, it is a portrait of the limits of grief and love, of how we navigate our inner and outer landscapes, and the tender courage demanded by the simple, daily quest of living.

      Ruth & Pen
      3.7
    • Zwei Frauen in Dublin

      Roman

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Der Debütroman der internationalen Bestsellerautorin von »Botschaften an mich selbst« Dublin, der 7. Oktober 2019: Ein Tag, eine Stadt, zwei Frauen. Sie kennen sich nicht, aber beide sind mit denselben Fragen konfrontiert: Wo ist mein Platz in der Welt, und was tue ich, wenn meine Wünsche nicht in Erfüllung gehen? Ein tief berührender und strahlend intelligenter Roman über die Grenzen von Trauer und Liebe und über den zarten Mut, den wir im Alltag brauchen. Ruth arbeitet als Therapeutin und steckt in einer Ehekrise. Ihr Mann Aidan ist auf einer Konferenz in London, und sie ist nicht sicher, ob er zurück nach Hause kommen wird. Die beiden sind ungewollt kinderlos und haben schon mehrere künstliche Befruchtungen hinter sich, doch Ruth weiß an diesem Morgen: Sie will nicht weitermachen. Gleichzeitig wappnet sich die sechzehnjährige Pen für diesen Tag. Heute wird sie nicht in die Schule gehen, sondern zur Klima-Demo; gemeinsam mit ihrer besten Freundin Alice, in die sie heimlich verknallt ist. Pen hat sich fest vorgenommen, es ihr heute zu sagen, inmitten der beängstigenden Menschenmenge.

      Zwei Frauen in Dublin
      4.2