Silicone implant and war prosthesis: Arno Bertina

Arno Bertina's novel "Des obus, des fesses et des prothèses" ("Grenades, Buttocks, and Prostheses," ed. Verticales, 2025) paints a grotesque yet insightful panorama of human suffering and survival in an unlikely setting: a luxurious hotel in Gammarth, near Tunis, set one to two years after the fall of Ben Ali and in the midst of the Libyan civil war. On one side, the hotel houses severely mutilated men, survivors of the brutal Libyan war, their bodies scarred by grenades and bullets. On the other, it houses women who have undergone cosmetic surgery and now, marked by bandages and bruises, await their recovery. These two groups, whose bodies have been “damaged” or “modified” in different ways, meet at the edge of a disused swimming pool, creating an atmosphere of unease, absurdity, and silent confrontation that hovers throughout the entire narrative.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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