Product: Book ISBN-10: 0-8021-1892-5 ISBN-13: 9780802118929 Publisher: Grove Press Country: Year: April 8, 2009 Edition: Tra Size: 12.95 x 18.80 x 2.29cm Number of pages: 208 Weight: 181gr Binding: Hardcover
editions
0.)Wetlands Charlotte Roche Fourth Estate; 2009 Hardcover
1.)WETLANDS Charlotte Roche Harpercollins Canada, Limited; 2009 Paperback
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With more than one million copies sold in Germany and rights snapped up in twenty-seven countries, Wetlands is the sexually and anatomically explicit novel that is changing the conversation about female identity and sexuality around the world.
Helen Memel is an outspoken eighteen-year-old, whose childlike stubbornness is offset by a precocious sexual confidence. She begins her story from a hospital bed, where she’s slowly recovering from an operation and lamenting her parents’ divorce. To distract herself, Helen ruminates on her past sexual adventures in increasingly uncomfortable detail, taking the reader on a sensational journey through Helen’s body and mind. Punky alienated teenager, young woman reclaiming her body from the tyranny of repressive hygiene (women mustn’t smell, excrete, desire), bratty smartass, vulnerable, lonely daughter, shock merchant, and pleasure seeker—Helen is all of these things and more, and her frequent attempts to assert her maturity ultimately prove just how fragile, confused, and young she truly is.
As Helen constantly blurs the line between celebration, provocation, and dysfunction in her relationship with her body, Roche exposes the double bind of female sexuality, delivering a compulsively readable and fearlessly intimate manifesto on sex, hygiene, and the repercussions of family trauma.
reviews
Ready to be disgusted
I knew a little bit about this book before I bought it. I was prepared to be disgusted and I was. But I was also very entertained. I actually recommend this book to those who enjoy something off-putting told from a fresh perspective.
interesting read. kept my attention.
I really enjoyed this book. It's almost everything that I would not do but everyone is so uptight about addressing. I like that about it. You can actively piece together the storyline and understand what's going on from the character's perspective.
If you like bizarre and shocking books … this is for you.
Wetlands is a very succinct little book. I read it in a few hours on the bus, although I did need to put it down once because of the graphic description of a certain plot twist involving the wheel break on a medical bed. It's funny and absurd in certain aspects, but also just very true when you take into context the fact that most young women, and people in general, all have their own personal hygiene habits, or lack thereof.
Get this, it's entertaining. I hope Charlotte Roche writes more.
Hmmm, how DO you describe this book exactly??
First let me say this- once a month or so, I go buy a stack of books. Then , I let my mom browse them and take a few. This was one of the books she took. Two days later, she gave it back to me and said »This is DISGUSTING«! Is that what made me want to read it? No. I knew there was a story in there somewhere and i was dying to know what it really was. So, after mucking through all the dross, I got my story. Was the read worth it? I kept saying to myself- what is wrong with the author?? Why would someone write this? I guess, without spoiling the story itself, this is what messed up families inflict upon their young 'uns!! I thought the psychology was interesting and how it manifested in this gal. But seriously, the only reason this book was a best seller is because of the shocking images created by the author … I'm curious what her next literary feat will be.
Anatomically Correct?
This is not a book for the feint of heart. I'm no prude, but I wind knowing too much about Helen's anatomy, especially its private parts. We spend too much time, like her boyfriends, between her legs. We get treated to her hemerroids (that she calls her cauliflower), her vagina (that she calls her pussy), her pubic hair to which we are treated to a male shaving it bare or almost. The writing is very frank, often gross. We hear too much about her »butthole,« (anus) and her buttocks, aka »cheeks,« and her nipples. I read it all the way through, but was sorry I did. I just wanted to know if there was lint in her bellybutton--there must have been!
I think the average woman would be offended by this book, but of course we men do not know what is talked about in the locker room. This author is a TV newswoman in Germany, don't know how she can face a camera. Maybe she does not wear panties so she can spread her legs toward it.