I Who Have Never Known Men

I Who Have Never Known Men, originally published in French as Moi qui n'ai pas connu les hommes, is a 1995 science fiction novel by Belgian author Jacqueline Harpman. It is the first of Harpman's novels to be translated into English. It was originally published by Seven Stories Press, under the title Mistress of Silence in 1997, then republished by Avon Eos.[1]

I Who Have Never Known Men
First edition
AuthorJacqueline Harpman
Original titleMoi qui n'ai pas connu les hommes
TranslatorRos Schwartz
LanguageFrench language
GenreScience fiction
PublisherTransit Books, Seven Stories Press, Avon Eos
Publication date
1995
Publication placeBelgium
Published in English
May 10, 2022
Media typeNovel
ISBN978-1-945492-60-0

I Who have Never Known Men was republished in 2022 by Transit Books, with a new afterword by Sophie Mackintosh.[2]

Synopsis

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Thirty-nine women and a girl are being held prisoner in a cage underground. The guards are all male, and never speak to them. The girl is the only one of the prisoners who has no memory of the outside world; none of them know why they are being held prisoner, or why there is one child among thirty-nine adults.

One day, an alarm sounds, and the guards flee; the prisoners are subsequently able to escape. They find themselves on an immense barren plain, with no other people anywhere, and no clue as to what has happened to the world. The book explores themes of loneliness, sensory deprivation, and survival.

Reception

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The book was a finalist for the 1995 Prix Femina.[3]

The New York Times described the novel as "bleak but fascinating", and "about as heavyhearted as fiction can get".[4] Kirkus Reviews compared it to The Handmaid's Tale, and said that it is "thin", but "moving" and "powerful".[5] L'Express called it "poignant" and "magnificent", and the product of a "profoundly original imagination".[6] In a piece for The New York Review of Books, Deborah Eisenberg wrote, “Paradoxically, the book’s austere mystery—the atrophied and gelid world it depicts—provides a richly allusive consideration of human life.”[7]

References

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  1. ^ The Locus Index to Science Fiction: 1984-1998 at Locus; retrieved April 27, 2011
  2. ^ "Transit Books — I Who Have Never Known Men". Transit Books. Retrieved 2024-11-19.
  3. ^ Premier round des prix d'automne, by Annie Coppermann; in Les Echos; published November 5, 1996; retrieved October 25, 2020
  4. ^ "I Who Have Never Known Men": Books, by Sally Eckhoff, from the New York Times, published September 14, 1997, retrieved April 27, 2011
  5. ^ I WHO HAVE NEVER KNOWN MEN, by Jacqueline Harpman, at Kirkus Reviews; published May 1, 1997; retrieved July 18, 2014
  6. ^ Moi qui n'ai pas connu les hommes, reviewed by Laurence Liban, in L'Express; published October 1, 1995; retrieved October 25, 2020; "Par ce récit poignant d'une quête dont l'objet se dérobe, par la puissance d'une imagination profondément originale, fantastique à sa manière, troublante et terrible", Jacqueline Harpman signe, une fois de plus, une oeuvre magnifique."
  7. ^ Eisenberg, Deborah (2022-07-21). "Condemned to Life". The New York Review of Books. Vol. 69, no. 12. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved 2024-11-19.
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