Paying homage: Julien Perez
Julien Perez's novel "Hommages" (POL, 2025) is, at first glance, a fragmentary work, but in reality a remarkably coherent one, composed of a multitude of voices—letters, speeches, reminiscences, introspective glimpses—all relating to the (presumably deceased) artist Gobain Machín, who disappeared in the mountains. The reader learns nothing directly from Machín's perspective, but receives information exclusively through the recollections of relatives, friends, collaborators, critics, and family members. The literary construction employs the rhetorical form of the obituary—hence the title Homages—to discuss the life, personality, and work of a fictional artist whose enduring influence is evidently due in no small part to his ambivalence. What appears to be a collective project of remembrance is simultaneously a poetically sophisticated puzzle exploring truth and fiction, intimacy and distance, the self and the other. The multitude of voices merges into a chorus characterized less by factual consistency than by emotional and metaphorical intensification. The narrative emerges through difference: from the juxtaposition of contradictions, overlapping perspectives, gaps, and ruptures, a picture of Gobain arises—and simultaneously a poetics-based self-portrait of the novel.
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