Review of Poor Madwoman | Anatomy of an impossible love

Chloé Delaume completely won us over with her previous novel, The synthetic heart, about the ups and downs of a woman’s heterosexual relationships in her 50s. A hilarious, caustic and feminist look at everyone’s expectations and disappointments, which earned its author the Medici Prize in 2020.



She returns to us with Poor foolan autobiographical novel in which the narrator uses a train journey to reflect on a complex and doomed relationship with a gay man.

Delaume has a tragic life story. She witnessed the murder of her mother by her father, an experience from which one does not emerge unscathed, as one suspects. She also experienced mental health issues and was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Delving once again into the theme of romantic relationships, this time she reflects on them in the light of her childhood wounds. It is often said that in life, we repair or we repeat. Which camp does Clotilde, the narrator, find herself in? Has she freed herself from her ghosts or has she reproduced the familiar but destructive patterns in this relationship of dependence where she is visibly not in control? It’s never easy…

We find the same mastery of writing and the same lucid intelligence in this novel as in the previous one, even if humor and lightness are less present. As for Clotilde, she unfortunately fails to move us. Damage.

Poor fool

Poor fool

Threshold

233 pages

6.5/10


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