Prix ​​Goncourt 2025, the four finalists: Emmanuel Carrère, Laurent Mauvignier, Nathacha Appanah, Caroline Lamarche

Laurent Mauvignier wins the Prix Goncourt 2025 for his novel La maison vide (The Empty House). The 58-year-old writer was awarded a prize by the jury of the Académie Goncourt on Tuesday, November 4th.

Adélaïde de Clermont-Tonnerre received the Prix Renaudot 2025 for Je voulais vivreThe book was opposed by Feurat Alani (Le ciel est immense), Anne Berest (Finistère), Justine Lévy (Une drôle de peine) and Louis-Henri de La Rochefoucauld (Modern Love) by.

All four finalists of the Prix Goncourt have already been featured here. Literary return discussed: To Emmanuel Carrère with Kolkhoze, Laurent Mauvignier with La maison vide, Nathacha Appanahs The night in the heart and Caroline Lamarches Le bel obscur, at 2025 pm.

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This article is written in German and can be found at https://rentree.de. Automatic translations into English and French are available. English, French.

Partnership and violence in the novel: Nathacha Appanah

The title “La nuit au cœur” (2025) of Nathacha Appanah’s new novel reflects its central themes: violence, fear, isolation, trauma, but also resistance and the search for meaning and memory. The novel is structured in five parts, alternating between the author’s personal, autofictional narrative and the reconstructed fates of Emma and Chahinez, with an “imaginary chamber” serving as a space for encounter and reflection. The novel deconstructs femicides not as isolated incidents, but as expressions of a deeply entrenched patriarchal system that transcends cultures and eras. It sharply criticizes patriarchal societies, particularly in Algeria and Mauritius, where women face stigmatization upon divorce and their autonomy is restricted. The parallel narratives of the three women—one survivor and two victims—underscore the universal danger women face and the chilling similarities in perpetrator profiles and patterns of violence (control, jealousy, isolation, physical and psychological abuse).

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Returning David's Star: Nathacha Appanah

The novel "Le dernier frère" (Éditions de l'Olivier, 2007, German translation: Unionsverlag, 2012) by Mauritian author Nathacha Appanah is a work of great poetic density and narrative complexity. At its heart is a childhood friendship between Raj, the narrator, and David, a Jewish boy who arrived in Mauritius on the internment ship "Atlantic." The novel explores how individual identity is formed through memory, loss, and experiences of violence. The text is simultaneously a historical analysis and an intimate narrative. Appanah intertwines the individual story of a Mauritian boy with the broader historical context of the internment of Jewish refugees by British colonial authorities in Mauritius during the Second World War. This creates a narrative tapestry of historical facts, psychological introspection, and poetic reflection that offers the reader not only a literary but also an ethical experience.

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Poetics of Childhood: Nathacha Appanah, La mémoire délavée (2023)

Nathacha Appanah's autofictional work "La mémoire délavée" (2023) is a multifaceted exploration of family origins, colonial history, and identity. At its heart lies the literary reckoning with the history of her own ancestors, who arrived on the island of Mauritius as Indian indentured laborers (engagés) in the 19th century. The title itself hints at the central theme: the blurred, faded memory—both individual and collective—that must be reconstructed through oral tradition, family anecdotes, gaps, and archives. This search is simultaneously a return to her own childhood: back to a time in Piton, a Mauritian village, to a childhood shaped by a family history marked by silence, fragments, and unspoken traumas. Childhood appears in this text as a biographical origin, a literary starting point, and an epistemological horizon: Through the child's wonder, sensory perception of the world, and the existential questions of the child who wants to know "where we come from," the text takes shape as a poetic space of memory.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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