In 1966, Réjean Ducharme, then a 24-year-old unknown, published
L'Avalée des avalés, this debut novel that would go on to serve as a
zeitgeist for several generations of French-Canadian readers. At nine
years old, Berenice feels trapped by home, family, and dogmas both real
and invented. Precocious and over-intelligent, she despises her
dysfunctional parents too viciously, loves her brother Christian too
passionately, and follows the logical pirouettes of her imagination to
conclusions too dangerous. She lives on a secluded island, where she
hatches plans to run away with Christian and escape her mother's needy
overtures for affection. When on the cusp of puberty Berenice becomes
too wild for even her parents to control, she's sent to live in New York
with her father's ultra-religious relatives where, pushed to confine her
impulses, she instead forces herself forward to new extremes.