From femme fatale to subject: Milady de Winter between Dumas and Clermont-Tonnerre

Adélaïde de Clermont-Tonnerre's "Je voulais vivre" (2025) is a stupendous attempt to restore the story of an iconic, ostracized figure in world literature: Milady de Winter, the supposedly "evil angel" from Dumas's "Les Trois Mousquetaires" (1844). The novel transforms the demon into a historically and psychologically plausible woman whose life is marked by male violence. Childhood traumas, social disenfranchisement, and the logic of a gender hierarchy that recognizes women only as possessions or threats form the denied backdrop to those acts that the canon labeled as metaphysical depravity. “Je voulais vivre” is thus far more than an intertextual game: it experiments with a corrective mode of storytelling in which literary myths are questioned and characters are freed from their centuries-long condemnation—not to exonerate them, but to finally understand them. This article traces this undertaking through a precise counter-reading of Dumas. It demonstrates how Clermont-Tonnerre does not negate the most famous Milady episodes—seduction, poisoning, revenge, branding, and execution—but rather re-perspectives them narratively, so that “malice” becomes causality and “seduction” an act of self-assertion. The essay shows how consistently the author restructures communicative power relations, temporal structures, and character constellations to shift the interpretive authority from male judgment back into the inner world of the character. This makes "Je voulais vivre" a literary plea for giving such fictional female characters justice in storytelling. The review concludes by explaining why Clermont-Tonnerre's novel deservedly received the 2025 Prix Renaudot.

➙ To the article
Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to give you the best possible user experience. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognizing you when you return to our site, and helps our team understand which sections of the site are most interesting and useful to you.