Form in its fullness: on the work of Laurent Mauvignier

This review focuses on a book that accompanies its author as he thinks, remembers, and formulates his thoughts. “Quelque chose d'absent qui me tourmente: entretiens avec Pascaline David” (Minuit, 2025) compiles conversations between Laurent Mauvignier and Pascaline David into a multifaceted self-portrait. David structures the volume as a chronological and thematic exploration of a literary life: from his traumatically marked beginnings, through the painstakingly acquired mastery of form, to a poetics that understands writing as an active, materially conscious search for truth. The dialogues repeatedly sharpen Mauvignier's insight that literature only arises where the author leaves behind the compromising inertia of common language—a thought he connects, among other things, to an art-theoretical maxim he recalls from his youth: “When color has its value, form is in its fullness.” The conversations reveal the writer as someone who feels as bound to his origins as he does he seeks to break free from their constraints, and who attempts to grasp reality not through documentary means, but through the organic logic of the sentence. Mauvignier's reflections on his initial leap into the void while writing "Loin d'eux," his sculptural approach to revision, his handling of spaces, bodies, and voices, as well as his self-criticism in dialogue with David, illuminate the work as an intimate workshop and a laboratory of literary form. The review makes Mauvignier's aesthetic thinking—the circling around the fullness of form, around the unease of the missing thing—visible in the tension between biographical experience, ethical stance, and poetic discipline.

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Prix ​​Goncourt 2025, the four finalists: Emmanuel Carrère, Laurent Mauvignier, Nathacha Appanah, Caroline Lamarche

Laurent Mauvignier wins the Prix Goncourt 2025 for his novel La maison vide (The Empty House). The 58-year-old writer was awarded a prize by the jury of the Académie Goncourt on Tuesday, November 4th.

Adélaïde de Clermont-Tonnerre received the Prix Renaudot 2025 for Je voulais vivreThe book was opposed by Feurat Alani (Le ciel est immense), Anne Berest (Finistère), Justine Lévy (Une drôle de peine) and Louis-Henri de La Rochefoucauld (Modern Love) by.

All four finalists of the Prix Goncourt have already been featured here. Literary return discussed: To Emmanuel Carrère with Kolkhoze, Laurent Mauvignier with La maison vide, Nathacha Appanahs The night in the heart and Caroline Lamarches Le bel obscur, at 2025 pm.

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This article is written in German and can be found at https://rentree.de. Automatic translations into English and French are available. English, French.

The elusive medal: Laurent Mauvignier

Laurent Mauvignier's monumental novel "La maison vide" (2025) is his family saga and an archaeology of silence. Its starting point is a chest of drawers full of relics—photographs with cut-out faces, vanished letters, a missing medal. From these gaps, the narrator reconstructs five generations since Napoleonic times, a history marked by wars, shame, myths, and unspoken traumas. This essay demonstrates that Mauvignier understands invention not as a lie, but as the only poetological possibility of saving the past from disappearing. Family myths are dismantled, and repressed stories—especially those of women like Marguerite—are made audible once more. "La maison vide" proves to be a meta-novel, simultaneously an intimate family history, a critical reflection on the politics of memory, a poetological manifesto, and a summa of his own work.

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Night Stories: Laurent Mauvignier

Laurent Mauvignier sets many of his books in the fictional town of La Bassée, including "La maison vide" (2025), announced for release this fall and highly regarded for French literary prizes. As preparation, we read his night stories from 2020, the setting of which Mauvignier returns to in his new book. Laurent Mauvignier's novel "Histoires de la nuit" (2020) unfolds in the isolated hamlet of "L'écart des Trois Filles Seules," where the painter Christine lives as a neighbor of the farmer Patrice, his wife Marion, and their daughter Ida, whose seemingly idyllic rural life is shattered by the preparations for Marion's 40th birthday. This peace is shattered when Marion's ex-partner Denis, fresh out of prison and driven by years of revenge, arrives with his brothers Christophe and Bègue to punish Marion for her perceived betrayal and the estrangement from her daughter. This culminates in the brutal killing of Christine's dog Radjah and the kidnapping of the two women. As the evening unfolds, Marion's violent past is revealed, while Patrice, who has long suppressed the truth about his wife, joins Marion in a desperate fight for their family's survival and to protect their daughter during a night of bloody confrontations that exposes deep-seated traumas and familial depravity.

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Waiting for Yoann: Laurent Mauvignier, Proches

In 2023, two novels by Laurent Mauvignier will be published in German: his 500-page novel "Histoires de la nuit" (2020) and "Des hommes" (2009). Both deal with problematic family arrangements. Also in 2023, Mauvignier's play "Proches" will be staged: a son whose anticipated return could either destroy or reveal the family, reminiscent of Aeschylus, Pasolini, Molière, or Lagarce. It is also a play about writing and language for the stage.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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