Rehabilitation of the mother: Émilie Lanez on Hervé Bazin's “Vipère au poing”
Émilie Lanez's exposé "Folcoche: le Secret de Vipère au poing" reveals that Hervé Bazin's famous novel "Vipère au poing" was less an autobiographical indictment of a monstrous mother than a calculated literary revenge by a criminally troubled son who wanted to erase his past and seize his inheritance: While Bazin portrays the mother Paule in his bestseller as a sadistic "folcoche" who torments her children, Lanez reconstructs, based on police files, psychiatric dossiers, and family correspondence, that Jean Hervé-Bazin was a mythomaniac fraudster whose novel served as a tool for blackmail and whose portrayal of the mother was a "murder on paper"; At the same time, Lanez's other works, "La Garçonnière de la République," an investigation into the secret, barely accountable power practices of the political elite around the presidential residence La Lanterne, and "Noël à Chambord," an analysis of Emmanuel Macron's monarchical self-presentation at the Château de Chambord, show that the author systematically exposes the gap between public staging and hidden truth – so that the review argues that Lanez not only destroys the myth of the heroic son in "Vipère au poing," but fundamentally unmasks the moral blindness of French institutions that protect perpetrators and silence victims.
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