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French writer Michel Houellebecq says the world will be the same after the coronavirus, only worse, AFP writes. Send a message to those who say the epidemic will be a turning point. “I will not believe the half-minute statements that: nothing will be like before,” he said.
He says we will not wake up to a new world once the closings are lifted. He called the coronavirus a “banal virus” that “has no redeeming properties … It doesn’t even spread sexually.”
However, he warned that the distance introduced due to the epidemic and working from home could accelerate the isolation of people.
On mortality statistics, he said, “France is better than Spain and Italy, but not as much as Germany. There are no big surprises in this.”
He knocked out French literary personalities who commented on the crisis from their country or coastal houses. According to AFP, it has not been revealed if he himself is still in his Paris apartment.
Houellebecq complained that he was unable to walk more than a kilometer due to the French closures. “A writer has to walk,” said the 64-year-old smoker.
With the publication of his latest book, Serotonin, we wrote about the writer-poet-artist of life Houellebecq that the work of one of the greatest heroes of the literary scandal of our time was this time about unbearable life.
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