Praise for the original French edition: <br />“A text of luminous, intuitive grace.”—Christine Ferniot, <i>Lire Magazine</i><p>“There is a Bobin style, a way of approaching literature through the joy that words radiate, the light they hold within.” —Guy Goffette, <i>Le Monde</i></p><p>“A portrait full of empathy that cares little for chronology and facts, since what really matters to the author is elsewhere. . . . Bobin preserves Emily Dickinson’s fervor, her attentiveness to small things, to nothing, to simplicity. . . . This is a biography full of grace and vision.”—Gérard Pussey, <i>Elle Magazine</i> (France) <br /></p>
"<i>[The Lady in White</i> is a] significant addition to the literature around Emily Dickinson."—M.A.Orthofer, <i>Complete Review</i>
As a reclusive writer himself, contemporary French author Christian Bobin felt a kindred tie to the poet, and his book The Lady in White honors Dickinson in the form of a brief, poetically imagined account of her life and the work that she gave the world. This fresh and personal interpretation of Dickinson’s life leaves one with an impression of knowing Dickinson both through her poetry, as recalled by Bobin, and as he senses the person she was through her work and the sparse facts we have about her life.