A review by reemkh44
I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacqueline Harpman

3.0

“Is there a satisfaction in the effort of remembering that provides its own nourishment, and is what one recollects less important than the act of remembering?”

“If you do something that isn't forbidden, and they intervene, then it's not the activity that's attracting attention, it's you yourself.”

This book is the female version of *The Stranger* by Albert Camus. It’s both short and long in its impact.

I was left with millions of unanswered questions. It Didn’t interest me much especially the relationships between the characters. and they keep discovering the same things for twenty years. I wanted more from the book than it gave me.

The story will always remain in my mind, so bizarrely. However, the ending didn’t meet my expectations.