The Confidantby Hélène Grémillon, translated by Alison Anderson
I got a letter one day, a long letter that wasn’t signed. This was quite an event, because I’ve never received much mail in my life. My letter box had never done anything more than inform me that the-sea-was-warm or that the-snow-was-good, so I didn’t open it very often. Once a week, maybe twice in a gloomy week, when I hoped that a letter would change my life completely and utterly, like a telephone call can, or a trip on the métro, or closing my eyes and counting to ten before opening them again.
And then my mother died. And that was plenty, as far as changing my life went: your mother’s death, you can’t get much better than that.
It is Paris, 1975 and Camille is sad; at the loss of her mother, and the fact that the baby growing inside her will not know its grandmother. She is doubly so at the demise of her relationship with Nicholas, who we’ll find out doesn’t want anything to do with the baby.
When this letter arrives in amongst all the condolence cards, she starts reading… It tells how teenager Louis met Annie back in 1933, and fell in love with her from afar. It doesn’t give many clues to who they are and where it happened. Camille is confused – why has this letter been sent to her?
In the following days and weeks, more letters arrive. Camille, who works in publishing, half wonders if it is a bizarre pitch being made to her, but something about the letters makes it seem that they are intended for her, and that the story therein is true.
They tell of how a bourgeois couple Mr & Madame M move into the village, about how Madam M notices Annie’s painting and encourages her, and how Annie later found out about Madame M’s inability to have a baby and offered to be a surrogate for her. War intervenes, and it all gets very complicated. Louis loses touch with Annie for several years, but is able to pick up the story later.
I hadn’t seen her for three years. For three years I’d had no news of her at all. At no time did I suspect she might be living in Paris like me. I looked at her fingernails, her peeling red varnish; in the village she never used to wear any. Seeing her again like this: It seemed too good to be true. Outside it was pitch black. I was suddenly overwhelmed by desire for her. She handed me a steaming hot cup.
‘So do you remember Monsieur and Madame M.?’
How could she ask me such a thing.
The story of Louis, Annie, Mr & Madam M is teased out over the course of the novel. It is complex, full of tragedy in many ways and multi-layered, with little revelations that keep Camille desperate to know what happened and full of questions still, not to mention her feeling an increasing bond of motherhood with Annie.
This novel uses two literary devices to tell its story – when most use just one. The dual narrative combined with the epistolary approach may feel somewhat contrived, but actually serves the story well. We have the same questions that Camille has about Annie’s life, we feel for Camille’s loss and Annie’s situation, and end up caring for both women, whereas often in dual narratives, one will dominate. I will say that I didn’t get much of a feel for 1970s Paris in Camille’s timeline though. However, the clever reveal made this a rewarding read, and I’ve yet to read a novel from Gallic books, who specialise in English translations of the best contemporary French books that I didn’t enjoy. (8/10)
For some other reviews see: Fleur Fisher and Winstonsdad.
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My copy came via the publisher – thank you. To explore further on Amazon UK, please click below:
The Confidantby Hélène Grémillon, translated by Alison Anderson, Gallic Books 2012, paperback 267 pages.
Sounds like an interesting read, one I am watching out for.
I like the idea of a publisher who specialises in translating French novels into English. It suggests that real care will have been taken in selecting the translator, which unfortunately isn’t always the case. I’m going to look up what they have published and keep an eye out for this in particular.
Alex – I’d recommend their books by Jean Teule esp ‘The Suicide Shop’ – as I know you liked Lightning Rods, you may enjoy that The Suicide Shop – as it has an equally outrageous premise!
Dual narrative and epistolary… you’re right, my instinct would be to say “too much”. Good to know that this can be pulled off nicely.
thanks for the mention this book was vey touching but also quite brilliant for a debut novel ,all the best stu
I ordered this the moment I read your review and have just finished it. I loved it, both for the storyline which was so well handled, and the economical prose, such a refreshing change from the somewhat overblown writing which often accompanies so-called “women’s novels”.
Glad you enjoyed it Victoria. I agree about the economy in the writing, that helped to set it apart.