Ici commence un amour by Simon Johannin
Ici commence un amour is a story about love, but it is also a story about grief and class and growing up, about trying to be a writer and a man and a person. It’s tender and restless and vicious at times. It reminded me of Sheila Heti in certain ways and of Edouard Louis in others. Like his protagonist, Théo, Johannin is from Marseille, and the book feels steeped in the city, exposing its contradictions and hypocrisies, its particular brand of politics, its staggering wealth inequality, its thriving culture, and brutish repression.
Violence threads through the novel. For a story about a young writer navigating the foibles of the literary scene, it is startlingly raw and sharp and in tune with the world. Gloria, the love of the title, is less a muse than a woman. The story is narrated in second person at times, like a letter addressed to her, which I found jarring at first but which is woven neatly into the narrative fabric. Johannin writes in clear language, which is often colloquial, but which easily shifts registers from affectless to emotive.
Johannin is young and immensely talented. An exciting writer to watch for the future.
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