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Angélique Villeneuve

Auteur de Les Fleurs d'hiver

11 oeuvres 54 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: By Yves Tennevin - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=15362501

Œuvres de Angélique Villeneuve

Les Fleurs d'hiver (2014) 43 exemplaires
À la recherche du paon perdu (2011) 2 exemplaires
Maria (2018) 1 exemplaire
Le festin de Citronnette (2016) 1 exemplaire
Un territoire (2015) 1 exemplaire
La belle lumière (2020) 1 exemplaire
Grand paradis (2010) 1 exemplaire
Nuit de septembre (2016) 1 exemplaire
Je suis ton manteau (2023) 1 exemplaire
Les Ciels furieux (2023) 1 exemplaire
À la recherche du paon perdu (2011) 1 exemplaire

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Critiques

A deep little book about the aftermath of the war, about the survivors (have they survived?), about the victors (are there any?). It is about a couple whose lives were separated by the war, by their different wartime experiences they did not want to and could not tell each other. Will they be able to make a bridge over this abyss?

I was intrigued by the flower maker's profession, which is described quite in detail. It sounds really hazzardous for the health.
 
Signalé
dacejav | 4 autres critiques | May 16, 2022 |
This is a real mixture of a book, both sad and a struggle, but it ends optimistically, if with no real certainty that they will live happily ever after. . It tells of Jeanne, whose husband returns from WW1, but has a terribly facial injury. It tells of her struggles to survive the war alone, the food shortages, the lack of fuel, bringing up her daughter all the while trying to keep them fed with her occupation making artificial flowers. Set along side er struggles are those of her neighbour, Sidonie, who has similar financial struggles, but a different outcome of her son who went off to war.
It is, at times, terribly bleak. It is, at times beautiful, almost poetic. There were a couple of incredibly startling chapters, one contrasting her flower making and his operations.
It is a fact that those that returned were not supported in a way we would not expect the state to support now. Not every returning soldier had physical scars, but for some the mental scars never healed. And that took a terrible toll on the families they returned to. This makes not attempt to look at the long term picture, this is the initial readjustment to a man returning who is not the same man who went off to war. The book ends on Armistice day and it feels like there has been some progress made on their readjustment to each other and a life together rather than the separate lives they had been leading with the memory of each other.
This is an inventive book, telling of war and the aftermath from a female perspective, we see very little of his war, only through his letters to Jeanne. We see different aspects of the conflict and its wider reaching effects, the population all suffer to some extent.
I can't help feeling that the road ahead will be tough for both of them, despite the first glimmers of hope that the final chapters bring.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Helenliz | 4 autres critiques | Apr 2, 2022 |
The writing in this was gorgeous. The author has written other books, but this is the first and the only on to be translated into English so far. Here's the Amazon blurb:

"It’s October 1918 and the war is drawing to a close.

Toussaint Caillet returns home to his wife, Jeanne, and the young daughter he hasn’t seen growing up. He is not coming back from the front line but from the department for facial injuries at Val-de-Grâce military hospital, where he has spent the last two years.

For Jeanne, who has struggled to endure his absence and the hardships of wartime, her husband’s return marks the beginning of a new battle. With the promise of peace now in sight, the family must try to stitch together a new life from the tatters of what they had before."


What is so well done here is that we are given a glimpse into both sides of the story. First, the wife who remained at home struggling to provide for herself and her young daughter. She makes and sells artificial flowers, which is where the title comes from. There is a lot of detail about the flower making, and it is fascinating. We also get to see into the husband's story and understand that he has experienced things that he cannot share properly with someone who wasn't there. They wrote during the war, but in order to spare each other, they did not write of the horrors they were each experiencing. They did not share their struggles. And when her husband is injured and he writes telling her not to come, she is hurt and angry.

"She always woke with a start first thing in the morning. She should have stirred herself, gone straight back to work, but for many months Toussaint's words tore at her. They were dark words.

I want you not to come.

Over time, the unusual construction so intrigued her that she tried to read into it what hadn't been said. Why hadn't he added 'my little darling', as he so often did, why hadn't he written, 'It's better if you don't come for now'? Or 'We need to be patient', or 'The doctor would rather we waited before you visit', or worst of all, 'I don't want you to come'? Touissaint hadn't chosen any of these. Perhaps he's had enough of not wanting, because no one ever listened to him. He had told his wife what he wanted, not what he didn't want.

I want you not to come."


When he finally does come home, bridging the gap seems too big an ask. This, for me, was a perfect read. Thanks so much to Charlotte for bringing it to my attention.
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Signalé
Crazymamie | 4 autres critiques | Nov 4, 2021 |
One of those beautifully written short novels that are bigger than the sum of their pages.

Jeanne, a home piece-worker of silk flowers, lives in Paris with her young daughter, a life of poverty in cramped surroundings during WWI. She is waiting for the return of her husband Toussaint. After a long period without word, he writes to her from a military hospital to tell her where he is, but not to come. Six months later he returns home.

Not a word out of place. You feel everything.

Highly recommended.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
Caroline_McElwee | 4 autres critiques | Aug 31, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
11
Membres
54
Popularité
#299,230
Évaluation
½ 4.3
Critiques
5
ISBN
12
Langues
2

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