The Islanders
Pascal Garnier; Emily Boyce (translator)
Gallic, Jun 9 2015, $13.95
gallicbooks.com
ISBN 9781908313720
Just a few days before Christmas in -17 degrees weather, Olivier
Verdier’s mother dies in Versailles. All
the recovering alcoholic could think of is that she still is a pain in the ass
even in death as her burial must wait until after the holiday; while he wants
to return home to his wife in Nice. A
snow storm adds to Olivier’s misery.
While at his mom’s pad, Olivier runs into neighbor Jeanne Mangin,
a schoolteacher for two decades.
Twenty-five years earlier in Le Chesnay when they were teens, the cops
considered Olivier and Jeanne as the prime suspects in the murder of a child
she babysat. She tells him that her
mother and the twins died in an accident, and she lives with her blind brother
Rodolphe whose only respite from his internal rage is the Louvre. At the same time that the déjà vu
relationship dynamics boil over, needing shelter from the unbearable weather,
homeless Roland Toutin enters the out of control orbit.
This translation of a Pascal Garnier French middle class tragedy
is another superb character-driven dark novella from an author who consistently
provides insightful looks at the underbelly of human interactivity. Filled with mocking graveyard humor and
anticipation that things will only turn worse, this like in his previous works
I read (see The A26,
The Front Seat Passenger, Moon in a Dead Eye, The Panda Theory
and How’s the Pain?) is why Monsieur Garnier has become one of my favorite
auteurs.
Harriet Klausner
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