Lost in Translation
Japan, what a fascinating country. The film Lost in Translation translates well this feeling of change of scenery that we feel in Tokyo. For 1 hour 42 minutes, the filmmaker Sofia Coppola makes us live as a tourist in Tokyo. Lost in Translation is not just an intriguing journey set in Japan. It is also a journey through time. When Bill Murray’s character, a jaded actor in the midst of a midlife crisis, picks up his phone and fax messages at the hotel, it reminds me with nostalgia of a time when we didn’t carry our lives around in our cell phones, when communication across the world wasn’t instantaneous.
Vincent Brousseau-Pouliot, The Press
Lost in Translation, a Sofia Coppola film starring Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson. Available for rental and purchase (e.g. AppleTV)
All your children sayspersés
There is a joy in discovering a prolific author late in life. When you regretfully finish your most recent book, you know that many more await you. This is what happened to me with the work of Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse, a French woman of Rwandan origin, survivor of the Tutsi genocide, whose magnificent collection I first read Overturn misfortune and the poignant story THE vswe send. I continued the journey to the land of his painful memory with his first novel All your children scattered (I read), Prize of the Five Continents of La Francophonie 2020. A touching story of return to the native country and transmission.
Rima Elkouri, The Press
All your children scatteredof Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse, J’ai lu editions, 221 pages
Are you following me?
I loved the book Disoriented by Yves P. Pelletier. So, I rushed to Are you following me? upon its release. I was not deceived. This great traveler returns for our greatest pleasure to the many journeys he made during his life. Tibet, Burma, Lebanon, Thailand, the Far North, the list goes on. And he does it with a mastered pen and an unbridled spirit. Above all, he does it without pretension. What interests him are meeting others. And too bad if language creates a barrier. He manages to jabber something or simply listen, as he does with a Tibetan monk he wanted to find. Added to these stories are some aspects of his professional life and several of his eventful emotional life. These episodes are as funny as they are touching. If you only put one book in your suitcase this summer, this is it.
Mario Girard, The Press
Are you following me?by Yves P. Pelletier, VLB Editor, 272 pages
Black Sea And Red Sands
1/2
There are tons of travel books, but there are few travel books that appeal to all the senses. Those of Caroline Eden, a British journalist who is particularly fond of Central Asia, Turkey, the Caucasus and the entire border between East and West, are among them. The author lets her prose gambol between politics, society, music, culinary culture and landscapes. We bite into the story of the people who cross her path as much as into a ripe apricot from Uzbekistan in July before getting to the stove to concoct a recipe that we found between two chapters. Hachette had the excellent idea of translating two of her most recent works into French, Black Sea And Red Sands.
Laura-Julie Perreault, The Press
Black Sea – A culinary journey between East and West And Red Sands – A Culinary Journey Across the Steppes of Asiaby Caroline Eden, Hachette editions, 280 and 309 pages