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"I read Olivia many, many times, bought it for many of my friends, and consider it the inspiration for Call Me by Your Name." --André Aciman "Perfectly captures the breathless excitement of adolescent passion." --Sarah Waters, bestselling author of Fingersmith and Tipping the Velvet The classic novel about a teenage girl's infatuation with her headmistress at a boarding school in nineteenth-century Paris A Penguin Classic A groundbreaking, passionate, and subtle story of first love, Olivia--based loosely on the author's own life--was first published in 1949 under a pseudonym. It tells the story of Olivia, a sixteen-year-old girl who is sent from England to a Parisian finishing school to broaden her education. Soon after her arrival, she finds herself falling under the spell of her beautiful and charismatic teacher, Mademoiselle Julie, who introduces her to art, literature, and fine cuisine. But Mademoiselle Julie's life is not as straightforward as Olivia imagines. As they grow closer, their relationship is threatened by jealousy and rivalry, and the school year seems destined to end in tragedy.
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a flushing, intense, fervid vignette of adolescent desire and love-wrought self discovery. im beset with longing towards an all-encompassing adoration without comparison and with seeming purity, or at the very least, exhilaration at its potential lack thereof. is love corrupting or emboldening ? should it make us strong or servile ? in youth even if we have the mind to ask these questions, we’re too preoccupied by the agonizing pulse, the pump and flow of these intoxicating feelings to make real sense of it. its maddening and dizzying but brings the type of jubilation that can only come from pain’s ecstasy. but even in our aged characters, likely littered with the slight wounds of past love, we see them submit to and resist, compress and repress passions whippings
KMS !