The author of "Vernon Subutex", back to the novel after five years, received almost unanimous criticism to praise this epistolary exchange about addiction and the #MeToo movement.

But he left the jurors hungry.

An indication seemed to pierce in a mixed review of one of the 12 members of the Académie Goncourt, Pierre Assouline, on his website.

Virginie Despentes is the star of this literary season, driven by very favorable reviews, and sales which reached some 65,000 copies, according to figures put forward by her publisher at the end of August.

But occupying a lot of space in bookstores and in the press is in no way a guarantee, in front of the jury of the most prestigious of French literary awards.

Emmanuel Carrère, with "Yoga" in 2020, realized this: he had been eliminated in the second round.

Winner of the Renaudot prize in 2010, for "Baby Apocalypse", Virginie Despentes was herself a juror of Goncourt for four years.

She quit in January 2020 to focus on writing.

Pierre Assouline, critic, journalist and author, let it be known that he had adored, on the other hand, two titles of the first selection, which appear at this stage among the favorites: "La Vie clandestine" by Monica Sabolo, which mixes personal history and investigation of the far-left group Direct Action, and "The heart does not yield" by Grégoire Bouillier, a 900-page return to a terrible news item from the 1990s, the voluntary agony of a lonely old lady.

happy surprise

Other titles are perceived as serious contenders by their quality of writing: "Taormine" by Yves Ravey, a thriller that takes place in Sicily, "Vivre vite" by Brigitte Giraud, the story of the last days of a husband who killed himself on a motorcycle, or "The almost sisters" by Cloé Korman, an investigation into the Shoah.

Muriel Barbery, who seemed very far from the tastes of Goncourt with her first success in 2007 ("The Elegance of the Hedgehog"), is 15 years later in the race with "One hour of fervor".

Goncourt's first list is always a happy surprise for a few low-key novels so far.

This is the case this year for "Beyrouth-sur-Seine" by Franco-Lebanese Sabyl Ghoussoub, "A human sum" by Haitian Makenzy Orcel, or "Our dear old lady author" by Anne Serre.

A fiction on an adviser to the Russian presidency was included despite a publication in April: "Le Mage du Kremlin" by Giuliano da Empoli, recommended among the summer readings of the Renaudot prize.

The winner must be announced on November 3.

Inclination for the "big ones"

The selection proved Goncourt's penchant for "big" publishing houses, with three authors from Gallimard, two from Flammarion or Stock, one from Seuil, Albin Michel, Actes Sud and even Minuit.

"Average" houses have a smaller place there: Rivages, L'Iconoclaste and Sabine Wespieser.

The publisher of "Cher Connard", Grasset, does not place any title in this first selection, but will be able to make up for it with other autumn prices.

Renaudot follows on Wednesday, disclosing its first selection.

The Inrocks literary prize published on Tuesday a first selection of twenty "French novels or stories" including that of Virginie Despentes.

There are other titles not retained by the Goncourt, although noticed by the critics, such as "La Thirteenth Hour" by Emmanuelle Bayamack-Tam, "Vers la violence" by Blandine Rinkel, or "Les Exportés" by Sonia Devillers.

The Goncourt high school students, awarded in December, will work on the same titles as his eldest.

55 establishments are associated, from Lens to Martinique via New York and Cavaillon.

© 2022 AFP