46th Montreal Book Fair | Zachary Richard, novelist

For more than 50 years, he has been publishing song records. He has also published five collections of poetry, three stories as well as a book of Acadian history intended for Louisiana classrooms. Now, at 73 years old, Zachary Richard adds a new string to his well-stocked bow: that of a novelist.




In fact, the singer-songwriter published last month the novel by Éditions Libre Expression The bursts of Lent. A history graduate from Tulane University in New Orleans, Zachary Richard naturally turned to the historical fresco for his first novel.

“This book recounts a news item that happened at the end of the 19th centurye century in my native village of Scott. Two very young men have been charged with the murder of a local merchant. The cause caused a stir at the time. There were interviews in the newspapers. This story is part of the folklore of the village. »

This news item which has always fascinated Zachary Richard served as a springboard for him to write his choral novel. The narration is often provided – but not always – by André, a 17-year-old young man who dreams of horse racing. He discovered the world with his paternal grandfather, the imposing Drozin Boudreaux. Having become rich by the arrival of the railway on his land, this man of influence tries to rise from his ashes like a phoenix, in a world in complete upheaval after the Civil War.

Did this Drozin Boudreaux really exist? “My great-great-great-grandfather’s name was Drozin, but the rest is made up. I still wanted to tell in this novel the arrival in New Orleans of famous people, including Sarah Bernhardt, who passed there 12 times. »

The discipline of the novelist

Why did you wait so long to move from poetry to prose? “For 30 years, I filled notebooks with fly’s legs for novel projects, but I didn’t have the discipline to continue this work on tour, which happened often. When I picked up the notebook on my return, I found that I had written nothing but shit. And I put the notebook aside…”

When the pandemic hit, he took out his 12 notebooks and reread them. “And indeed, it was pretty much shit! » But the desire for the novel was intact. And he had time to be confined on his side…

So he leaned over his work table every day to add words to his mill. “One does not write a novel as a dilettante. It requires commitment: you have to lay one brick at a time. In poetry, the encounter with the muse is instantaneous. For the novel, I didn’t work with an outline like others do. I followed the flow. I trusted that once in the canoe, the current would carry me. »


PHOTO PATRICK SANFAÇON, THE PRESS

Zachary Richard signs the novel The bursts of Lent.

It was only at the end that I knew how this story ended. And when I realized it, I cried my eyes out… I could reconcile old hatreds with this story about the power of forgiveness.

Zachary Richard

In addition to the desire to tell a story other than through his songs, Zachary Richard wanted to showcase French-speaking Louisiana culture as experienced by his grandparents and those before them. “I wanted to show the sound and texture of this Cajun culture that I knew and which has disappeared today. »

Another interesting element of this novel planted on the losing side of the Civil War: the complex relationship between the former masters and the former slaves. “The benchmarks were down. Relations between African descendants and those from Europe were much less simplistic and one-dimensional than one might believe…”

A language to choose

For this first novel, Zachary Richard asked himself many questions about the language he wanted to use. Should we highlight “the exoticism of Louisiana speech” or rather favor a more international French? He chose the second option, but he slips in very local expressions here and there which remind us that we are on Cajun soil. “I walked a tightrope all the way. »

With The bursts of Lent, Zachary Richard becomes the first French-language Louisiana author to publish a novel since 1894. “The last was Sidonie de La Houssaye, who wrote serial novels in newspapers. At the beginning of the 20the century, the steamroller of American culture passed over us, notably with the adoption of the education law. My parents experienced a brutal linguistic assimilation…”

He is the first in 129 years to write a novel in French in Louisiana. But he is hopeful for the future. “More will follow, I’m sure. » And does he, for his part, think of getting back to work on a second novel? “We’ll see what the muses decide. »

Zachary Richard at the Book Fair

The Cajun author will participate in numerous activities during the Book Fair. In addition to the signing sessions, solo or with other Louisiana authors, he will participate in two round tables and a cabaret show. It will also offer a public reading in addition to being at the heart of a major interview hosted by Catherine Richer.

The bursts of Lent

The bursts of Lent

Free expression

400 pages


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