Poetics of Childhood: Jean-Baptiste Del Amo, Le Fils de l'homme (2021)

Jean-Baptiste Del Amos's novel "Le Fils de l'homme" (Gallimard, 2021, translated into German by Karin Uttendörfer as "Der Menschensohn," Matthes und Seitz, 2025) depicts a childhood experience at the boundary between trauma, the forces of nature, and archaic initiation. In a language of minimalist poetic concision and biblical force, the novel portrays shaping, deformation, and fracture: childhood appears here not as a place of innocence, but as a transitional stage of becoming, characterized by silence, physicality, and an irresolvable ambivalence between closeness and alienation. At the heart of the novel lies the relationship between a father and his son—a relationship defined not by dialogue or mutual understanding, but by physical presence, speechlessness, and archaic rituals. In prose of dense beauty and relentless precision, Del Amo explores the dynamic between a man who seems to have fallen out of history and a child who grows up in that history without being able to understand or name it.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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