Rimbaud Fictions: Samuel Benchetrit
Samuel Benchetrit's novel "Le coeur en dehors" (Grasset, 2009) takes us into the world of Charlie Traoré, a ten-year-old boy of Malian-Black descent growing up in a French suburb, a "cité." His daily life is defined by the affection of his mother, Joséphine, his crush on Mélanie, his friendships with his friends, and his worry for his drug-addicted older brother, Henry. The story begins dramatically when Charlie's mother is arrested by the police because her papers are not in order. The novel then depicts a single, pivotal day in Charlie's life as he wanders through his neighborhood, searching for his brother Henry and trying to uncover the circumstances surrounding his mother's arrest. This odyssey leads him through the poet-named towers, dilapidated shopping malls, and bleak neighborhoods of his surroundings. Charlie himself can be understood as a kind of modern “seer” (voyant) in the Rimbaudian sense, even though he does not write verses himself.
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