Peace in a world of ghosts: Cyrille Falisse

Cyrille Falisse's debut novel, "Seuls les fantômes" (Belfond, 2025), begins with an abrupt breakdown: Melvile, abandoned by his partner, loses all inner stability. The separation is portrayed not as heartbreak, but as a physical and psychological collapse, in which the silencing of desire is made visible by the recurring phrase "Je ne jouis plus" (I no longer enjoy). Melvile's withdrawal, his fragmented daily routines, and the voices that intensify his inner monologue mark a psychological overstimulation. Central to the novel is the figure of the "ghostly"—the "fantômes"—as a metaphor for intrusive memories and unresolved emotional imprints that drive Melvile to a systematic reckoning with his past. Decay, physical impotence, obsessive thoughts, and the oppressive atmosphere of his apartment reflect his crisis. At the same time, he structures his inner world through writing and digital identity, with images of nature and water illustrating the processing of traumatic memories. The narrative center remains the search for lost loved ones, the confrontation with guilt, and the gradual integration of loss, while the story evolves into a narrative of travel and quest that is less geographically than psychologically motivated. Falisse's argument lies in the close connection between inner crisis, psychological processing, and narrative form. The precise, unpretentious language makes emotional upheavals immediately palpable and combines metaphorical density with concrete physicality. Digital forms of communication, mental loops, and a fragmented temporal structure form a narrative system that makes Melvile's isolation, reflection, and slow stabilization visible. The book shows that memory, loss, and desire must not be suppressed but rather processed and integrated. Falisse succeeds in portraying existential experiences in a balance between vulnerability and formal rigor: The ghosts of the past remain but lose their destructive power, and Melvile recognizes his fragility as a strength—a conclusion that combines psychological insight and literary precision.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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