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Books

Grove Press
Grove Press
Grove Press

Priority

A Correspondence Published by Jean-Luc Foreur

by Iselin Hermann Translated from Danish by G. Forester

“A gem of an epistolary novel, a tiny thriller . . . Hermann reveals a startling capacity of human beings for self-invention.” –The Baltimore Sun

  • Imprint Grove Paperback
  • Page Count 144
  • Publication Date May 23, 2001
  • ISBN-13 978-0-8021-3803-3
  • Dimensions 5" x 7.25"
  • US List Price $11.00

About The Book

Acclaimed as “a sensuous literary treat” by the Santa Fe New Mexican, Priority is a lovely and nuanced exploration of intellectual admiration that develops into consuming passion. It begins as a young woman, Delphine, writes a letter to Jean-Luc, a painter whose work has touched her. She is sure he will not read it–but he does, and he answers. Over the next eighteen months, Delphine’s letters bare her soul layer by layer, making her ever more vulnerable to his teasing replies and long silences. Helplessly, Delphine finds herself falling in love with a man she knows only through what he reveals in his letters. Her fascination with him begins to overwhelm her, until she begins to long for a lover she has never seen. Finally, it seems, a meeting may no longer be postponed.

Tags Literary

Praise

“A gem of an epistolary novel, a tiny thriller . . . Hermann reveals a startling capacity of human beings for self-invention.” –The Baltimore Sun

“[This] correspondence . . . gradually increases in emotional intensity, bares heart and soul, and reveals some of their deepest thoughts and feelings. . . . Hermann is good at keeping the letters honest and interesting and her characters real and vulnerable.” –Booklist

“[Jean-Luc] write[s] erotically, poetically, seductively [and] Delphine reciprocates with her own charming, elaborate, erotic fantasies about a man she has never met. . . . An extraordinary twist makes it even more thought provoking. Read it to find out. Along the way, savor the delicious writing.” –Santa Fe New Mexican

“Passionate poetry . . . Hermann is at her best when writing the courting dance.” –Publishers Weekly