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  1. The Divine Child (French: Le Divin enfant) is a 1992 novel by the French writer Pascal Bruckner. It tells the story of twins who are educated while still in their mother's uterus and one of them ends up refusing to be born; he struggles with his mother and with God and eventually becomes a celebrity while still unborn. The book was ...

  2. The Divine Child. Pascal Bruckner, Joachim Neugroschel (Translator) 3.70. 1,063 ratings58 reviews. Madeleine Barthelemey is pregnant with twins. On the advice of her doctor, she decides to undertake their education in utero. Nine months later, Celine is born - a daughter whose cleverness and erudition vanish the moment she enters the world.

    • (1,1K)
    • Hardcover
  3. The Divine Child: A Novel of Prenatal Rebellion | Bruckner, Pascal, Neugroschel, Joachim | ISBN: 9780316114042 | Kostenloser Versand für alle Bücher mit Versand und Verkauf duch Amazon.

  4. 1. Jan. 1994 · 4.1 5 ratings. See all formats and editions. During a technically advanced age that enables unborn children to receive prenatal educations and have a conscious understanding of the outside world, a disillusioned Louis battles his determined mother when he decides he does not wish to be born.

    • (5)
    • 1992
    • Pascal Bruckner
    • Pascal Bruckner
  5. The divine child : a novel of prenatal rebellion. After being force-fed with taped data to make him a genius, a child refuses to leave his mother's womb. He has decided life is not worth living. When the mother tries starving him out, he responds by attacking her internal organs. By the author of Evil Angels.

  6. With acerbic wit and a remarkably light touch, Pascal Bruckner plunges full force into a dystopian vision ot creation gone awry, of reproductive mutiny. The Di'vmt' Child is an unforgettable,...

  7. www.kirkusreviews.com › pascal-bruckner › the-divine-childTHE DIVINE CHILD | Kirkus Reviews

    7. Nov. 1994 · by Pascal Bruckner ‧RELEASE DATE: Nov. 7, 1994. bookshelf. shop now. amazon. A would-be Rabelaisian novel from French writer Bruckner (Evil Angels, 1987), who has an interesting idea—defy death by refusing to be born—but smothers it with gratuitously explicit sex, grotesque physical details, and old-hat intellectualism.