André Aciman wasn’t entirely honest with us. In late 2017, around the release of the film adaptation of his cherished 2007 novel Call Me by Your Name, he indicated that he’d closed the book on his ...
All this is by way of a preface, but it is not unimportant. As fans of Aciman will know, everything he writes is premeditated and calibrated. A leading scholar of Proust – and currently a professor of ...
Special to Charleston City Paper | As slow, sultry tides roll through the Lowcountry this June, so will a literary voice attuned to the rhythms of memory and longing. Charleston readers will soon have ...
André Aciman is used to the swooning, the people who clutch his arm and spill their hearts, their memories and their thanks. It’s the precious price Aciman pays for dreaming up “Call Me By Your Name,” ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. “I try not to speak about my work to my students because I don’t teach creative writing; I teach literature,” Aciman explains over ...
“I want to become a human being who understands what being human is about,” explained André Aciman, a New York Times bestselling author and former University professor of French literature. Aciman ...
THR review: Andre Aciman’s 'Call Me by Your Name’ Sequel ‘Find Me,’ follow-up to the beloved queer romance (adapted into an Oscar-winning film in 2017), picks up more than a decade after the events of ...
Find Me opens not on either of that story’s leading men, but 10 years later, on Elio’s divorced father, Samuel, who has a sexy Linklater interlude with Miranda, a young woman he meets on a train from ...
Ahead of his book's Oct. 29 release, Andre Aciman talks with The Hollywood Reporter about what inspired him to return to the world of Elio and Oliver, why he doesn't think 'Find Me' is a sequel and ...
In our age, hookups seem to happen so easily, so quickly, so uninhibitedly,” says André Aciman, author of the novel Call Me by Your Name. “The basic demands are minimal: pleasure, safety, respect, fun ...
“I feel a bit like Trump — I have nothing prepared to say.” With such improvisation started André Aciman’s Nov. 11 talk and reading of his new novel, “Find Me,” the sequel to “Call Me By Your Name,” ...