Poetics of Childhood: Maylis Adhémar, L'école est fineie (2025)
"L'école est finie" by Maylis Adhémar (Stock, 2025) tells the story of nine-year-old Al, who rebels against the harshness and constraints of the school system in the southern French village of Cos. Together with his friend Adeline, he founds the secret "ACE"—the Association Contre École—and creates his own poetic counter-world in the abandoned Fort Barbaresque. There, the children experience adventures, practice rituals, bury a bird, and write their stories on the walls—far removed from the expectations of adults. Al observes the adult world with a critical eye: school, family, history, and politics appear as zones of discipline, alienation, but also of memory. The novel is a poetic homage to the rebellious power of childhood and the longing for freedom, belonging, and one's own truth. Maylis Adhémar's "L'école est finie" unfolds a captivating and poetically intense childhood in a village in southern France during the 1990s. Through the character of nine-year-old protagonist Al, the author not only portrays a childhood full of adventure and adversity, but also a complex picture of the relationship between individual freedom, institutional violence, and poetic imagination.
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