Poetics of Trembling: Maria Pourchet
Maria Pourchet's "Tressaillir" (2025) unfolds "trembling" as a poetic mode of cognition—a vibrant interplay of body, language, and environment. At its center is Michelle Darras, a children's book author and mother, who finds herself adrift after the end of her relationship with Sirius. The novel begins in the microcosm of the banal—watering plants on a Parisian balcony—and expands into a cartographic movement of anxiety: across the body, language, and weather. Michelle's skin, inflamed and peeling, becomes a speaking membrane between inside and outside, the surface of memory. Water, earth, wind, and skin form the vocabulary of an organic poetics in which anxiety itself becomes knowledge. The trauma of a childhood storm and the national trauma surrounding the "Grégory" case permeate the text as a mythological undercurrent. In confronting these primal fears, the role of motherhood, illness, and the irresolvable tension between nurturing and destruction, Michelle ultimately arrives at a form of knowledge that is not rational but sensitive. The review reads "Tressaillir" as a vibrating organ of language—a text that itself trembles. It emphasizes Pourchet's poetics of porosity, in which body and text, illness and knowledge, weather and feeling merge. The author's ability to intertwine analytical precision and eruptive emotionality is particularly highlighted: the measurable (water, temperature, skin) encounters the uncontrollable (fear, desire, memory). The review identifies in the name of the male partner, "Sirius," the antithesis to this trembling—light without warmth, control instead of resonance—and interprets Michelle's separation as a cosmological liberation from a rigid orbit. Stylistically, she praises Pourchet's paratactic, breathing syntax as a reflection of physical trembling and the body metaphors as an ethical statement: vulnerability is a form of knowledge. Thus, the review understands the novel not as a psychological case study, but as a literary experiment on life itself.
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