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Club des enfants perdus(Le)
Description:
If I had children today, I would be at war," declares 27-year-old Miranda at the end of The Lost Boys Club. Children should be at the center of our concerns, even though they are already paying the price for our choices, our mistakes, and our renunciations. Miranda is emblematic of this generation, but she curiously eludes definitions and diagnoses, despite a depression that revealed an extreme sensitivity, to the point of developing supernatural gifts, of causing apparitions, splitting, and phantom presences. This means that adults are incapable of discerning what is wrong with these lost young people, as if incapable of accessing paranormal manifestations, invisible communications. This is one of the great tensions of the novel: our collective relationship with the invisible, the inexplicable, the magical, which has been lost over the centuries and returns here as a novelistic symptom of the solitude of an entire generation."--Publisher's website
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