What Belongs to You

paperback, 208 pages

Published Dec. 20, 2016 by Picador.

ISBN:
978-1-250-11789-2
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4 stars (10 reviews)

"A haunting novel of erotic obsession by a major new talent On an unseasonably warm autumn day, an American teacher walks down a stairwell beneath Sofia's National Palace of Culture, looking for sex. Among the stalls of a public bathroom he encounters Mitko, a charismatic young hustler. He returns to Mitko again and again over the next few months, and their trysts grow increasingly intimate and unnerving as the enigma of this young man becomes inseparable from that of his homeland, a country with a difficult past and an uncertain future. What Belongs to You is a stunning debut about an American expat struggling with his own complicated inheritance while navigating a foreign culture. Lyrical and intense, it tells the story of a man caught between longing and resentment, unable to separate desire from danger, and faced with the impossibility of understanding those he most longs to know"--

7 editions

Review of 'What Belongs to You' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Sometimes I have to remind myself that books can be judged on two different axes: quality of writing and enjoyment level. This was a fantastically written book, but goddamn was it a bummer.

I felt like the narrator was a friend of mine that we kept having late night heart-to-hearts about this new awful guy he's been seeing and we would agree that it's best if they break it off... and then a week later I would see him out with that guy again. And it's telling that this hookup that he cruised in a sketchy-ass public bathroom is the focus of the entire book because Mitko is literally the only named character; the narrator never names himself and everyone around him is only referred to by first initial. Even scenes that Mitko's not in, the narrator finds his thoughts drifting back to this guy he'd be better off without. …

Review of 'What Belongs to You' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Une histoire poignante, celle d'un professeur américain installé en Bulgarie après avoir fui le Sud américain profond et son père homophobe. A Sofia, il rencontre un jeune prostitué bulgare avec lequel il va nouer une relation faite de désir et d'argent. Le roman est parfois lent mais l'ensemble est plutôt réussi, d'autant que la plume de Garth Greenwell est très belle.

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