To our imperfect lives | Lose the thread

I really like Véronique Ovaldé, whom I have been reading since her beginnings. I fell in love at first sight from the first novel, What I know about Vera Candida (2009). Her lively writing, her strong female characters, her thoughts on family… This author, whom I had the pleasure of interviewing in 2016, had everything to please me.



However, the magic did not happen when reading this collection of eight short stories recently published in Quebec. These stories all have a link between them, a thread that runs through them: the main character of one story becomes the secondary character of the next story.

In my favorite short story, “The Man of the Future and the Barbed Wire Girl”, we discover Rachel, a woman we imagine to be in her early sixties. Newly widowed, she suddenly finds herself in a perilous situation which will have a hilarious outcome. Rachel is by far the most embodied character in the collection and this short story is perfectly mastered. The other news is not as successful. The characters are one-dimensional, and we never manage to care about what happens to them. As for the narrator who links the stories, I found her rather boring. Where is Ovaldé’s fantasy? The writing is fine and elegant, but it lacks the rhythm, the contagious energy that would capture the reader.

That said, Ovaldé won the Goncourt for short stories with this collection, which means that the appreciation of a book remains very personal.

To our imperfect lives

To our imperfect lives

Flammarion

160 pages

6.5/10


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