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58 pages 1 hour read

Jean-Dominique Bauby

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

Jean-Dominique BaubyNonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 1997

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Chapter 23Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapter 23 Summary: “The Ladies of Hong Kong”

Bauby loved to travel in his former life. He counts himself fortunate to have stored up “enough pictures, smells, and sensations over the course of the years to enable [himself] to leave Berck far behind on days when a leaden sky rules out any chance of going outdoors” (103). He catalogues some of his choices: the sour smell of a New York bar, the odor of a Rangoon market. The “white icy nights of Saint Petersburg or the unbelievably molten sun at Furnace Creek in the Nevada desert” (103).

He tells us that, this week, he has flown to Hong Kong at dawn every day in his imagination, in order to attend a conference for the international editions of what he still calls “his magazine” (103). He has trouble filling in the details of these imaginary tripsdue to the fact that, in his former life, some small misfortune or happenstance always prevented him from actually making the journey to Hong Kong. On one occasion, he gave up his seat for a Jean-Paul K., who was later taken hostage by terrorist group Hezbollah. He intimates that, although he was fond of Jean-Paul, he never saw him following his incarceration and release—perhaps because he was ashamed to be “editor in chief in the frothy world of magazines while [Jean-Paul] wrestled with life on its most brutal terms” (104).

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