Roman noir as criticism of the state: Benjamin Dierstein

With his completed trilogy "Bleus, Blancs, Rouges" (2025-2026), Benjamin Dierstein presents a monumental noir epic that maps France between 1978 and 1984 as a political, moral, and institutional crisis zone. Intertwining fictional fates with real historical figures and scandals, he unfolds an unflinching saga about terrorism, intelligence services, Françafrique, and the transition from the Giscard era to the "Mitterlandie" (the French term for France). Dierstein combines meticulous archival research with narrative force and satirical sharpness, portraying a republic whose power structures are riddled with rivalries, corruption, and systematic cover-ups. The trilogy reads simultaneously as a suspenseful thriller and a dissecting diagnosis of a state in which political reason and moral integrity have irrevocably diverged.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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