The perfect murder as a chimera: Julie Wolkenstein's game with truth and power
Julie Wolkenstein's novel "Chimère," published by POL in 2026, unfolds during the first lockdown of 2020 as a sophisticated, polyphonic revisit of a supposedly long-closed case: in 1994, the manipulative art collector Osmond fell to his death after a private viewing in Rome. In a "false" crime novel that is less concerned with identifying the perpetrator than with seeking the truth, five women—aunt, sister, friend, accomplice, and widow—reconstruct the life of a man whose psychological subjugation ("emprise") has deformed their biographies from diverse media and linguistic perspectives. Closely intertextually linked to Henry James's "The Portrait of a Lady" and simultaneously structured by the scientific paradox of microchimerism, the novel combines family investigation, gender reflection in the light of #MeToo, and criminal suspense into a "chimeric" poetics of identity. The review reads “Chimère” as a turning point in Wolkenstein’s work: as a return to fiction after autobiographical books, as a homage to James, and as a virtuoso construction of a play on truth, memory, and liberation – a novel that shows that every revelation remains a projection and that even the perfect murder only gains its form in the medium of storytelling.
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