“Just imagine living in a world without mirrors. You’d dream about your face and imagine it as an outer reflection of what is inside you. And then, when you reached forty, someone put a mirror before you for the first time in your life. Imagine your fright! You’d see the face of a stranger. And you’d know quite clearly what you are unable to grasp: your face is not you.”

From the book Immortality, by Milan Kundera.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Milan Kundera, a writer of Czech origin who has lived in exile in France since 1975, where he became a naturalized citizen in 1981. He is best known as the author of The Unbearable Lightness of BeingThe Book of Laughter and Forgetting, and The Joke. Kundera has written in both Czech and French. He revises the French translations of all his books; these therefore are not considered translations but original works. His books were banned by the Communistregimes of Czechoslovakia until the downfall of the regime in the Velvet Revolution in 1989.

The colour photo is from Wikipedia and is the most recent photo of Kundera who was born in 1929.

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