Leading Authors of Today's Magazine
  • Home
  • Editorial
  • Featured New Authors
  • Anthologies
    • Moguls Unleashed
      • Dr. Dashnay Holmes is a Dynamic Entrepreneur!
      • Dr. Jane Mukami
      • Dr. Demaryl Roberts-Singleton
      • Dr. Desirie Sykes
      • Dr. Terry Golightly
      • Dr. Shontae Davidson
      • Dr. Adrienne Velazquez
      • Dr. Nichole Pettway
      • Dr. Daniela Peel: Corporate Wellness
  • News and Updates
  • More
    • Multimedia
    • Author of the Month
    • Book Reviews
    • Interviews and Conversations
    • Community and Engagement
    • Writing Resources
    • Genre Explorations
No Result
View All Result
Leading Authors Of Today's Magazine
No Result
View All Result

Book Review: ‘Connemara,’ by Nicolas Mathieu

May 24, 2024
in Book Reviews
0
Home Book Reviews
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Book Review: ‘Connemara,’ by Nicolas Mathieu


Hélène is a human resources consultant, a snarky and ambitious provincial girl made good. After a midcareer burnout, she has persuaded the father of her two children to leave Paris and move the family back to her native Lorraine. This return to the more peaceable world that Hélène long ago rejected doesn’t succeed in stilling her demons. Work and home conspire to irritate her: Hélène’s new boss has promoted a more recent male hire over her head; her partner is working later and later hours, and she’s resentful of his reluctance to assume his share of child care.

Bored, pissed off, alienated, Hélène drifts into a Tinder otherworld, seeking semi-anonymous revenge sex. During a failed date in a chain restaurant by a bowling alley, Hélène spots her high school classmate Christophe, a former hockey star. Sure, he’s put on a little weight and he was never all that bright, but her desire and curiosity are piqued.

Their ensuing motel-room love affair (described in pages of oddly generic sex) brings together two divergent small-town destinies. If Hélène is the class traitor who through brains and hard work escaped to the big city and is now trying to find her way home, Christophe, sweet-natured, dutiful, is the boy who never wanted to leave. Divorced, with an only son, Christophe is now selling dog food door to door and living with his father, who is struggling with dementia. Until he reconnects with Hélène, Christophe’s chief pleasures are getting drunk with his childhood buddies and dreaming of making a comeback with his old hockey team.

“Connemara” reaches its climax during the runoff to the 2017 elections, when President Emmanuel Macron faced the far-right candidate Marine Le Pen. Hélène and Christophe’s romance thus becomes emblematic of the nation’s larger cultural and socioeconomic divides. The question of whether Hélène will leave her high-earning partner and seek a humbler kind of hometown happiness is mirrored by the larger question of whose France will prevail — the France of elite technocrats represented by Macron, or the nostalgic France invoked by the far right, a nation of working-class bars with photos of Jacques Brel on the wall, where the old-timers “scratched off lottery tickets as they chatted about politics, horse racing and immigrants.”

These open wounds of class belonging and dispossession are crucial subjects for both European and American writers today. Mathieu knows how to take us from a small-town hockey match to a corporate boardroom, but “Connemara” — despite Sam Taylor’s smooth translation — lacks the passion or the rigor to give the story more than a surface gloss.



Read More

Previous Post

Regional workshops bring children’s books to life

Next Post

Q & A with Yamile Saied Méndez

Next Post
Q & A with Yamile Saied Méndez

Q & A with Yamile Saied Méndez

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Random News

The Top Books to Read From 2000-2023

The Top Books to Read From 2000-2023

...

Women, Black Artists Not Articulate Enough For My Book

Women, Black Artists Not Articulate Enough For My Book

...

Book Review: ‘The Singularity Is Nearer,’ by Ray Kurzweil

Book Review: ‘The Singularity Is Nearer,’ by Ray Kurzweil

...

‘Kairos’ by Jenny Erpenbeck wins 2024 International Booker Prize : NPR

‘Kairos’ by Jenny Erpenbeck wins 2024 International Booker Prize : NPR

...

Champions of Degrowth Want to Shrink the Economy to Save the World.

Champions of Degrowth Want to Shrink the Economy to Save the World.

...

Introducing BTS by pasta 😅😅 #shorts #bts

Introducing BTS by pasta 😅😅 #shorts #bts

...

About us

Today's Author Magazine

Welcome to Today's Author Magazine, the go-to destination for discovering fresh talent in the literary world. We shine a light on new authors and captivating anthologies, providing readers with a diverse array of stories and insights. Here's a look at the vibrant categories that make up our magazine

RecentNews

Bishop Funke Adejumo: Writing Her Legacy Into Nations

Elevating Leadership, Empowering Women: The Journey of Dr. Janet Lockhart-Jones

Leading with Words: The Transformational Journey of Dr. Mark Holland

Faith, Healing, and Resilience: The Empowering Voice of Elaine King

Categories

  • Anthologies
  • Author of the Month
  • Book Reviews
  • Community and Engagement
  • Editorial
  • Featured
  • Featured New Authors
  • Genre Explorations
  • Global Influence
  • How-to
  • Interviews and Conversations
  • Multimedia
  • News and Updates
  • Other
  • Uncategorized
  • Writing Resources

RandomNews

Children’s literature going downhill with silly books

Top 12 AI podcasts to listen to

Asim Poems Included in Two Major Anthologies

Literary festivals: Time of the Writer and Books on the Bay reveal their line-ups for 2024

Shrimad Ramayan show bts / ayansh pandey #cute #bts #trending #ramayan #sonysab #ram #4k #msti

  • Home
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Contact

© 2024 Today's Author Magazine. All Rights Are Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Moguls Unleashed
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2024 Today's Author Magazine. All Rights Are Reserved.