Synopses & Reviews
Quintessential Anne Serre — this restless, prowling novel explores love as a form of greed, and confused need as one shape of bereftness
Anna has been living happily for twenty years with loving, sturdy, outgoing Guillaume when she suddenly (truly at first sight) falls in love with Thomas. Intelligent and handsome, but apparently scarred by a terrible early emotional wound, he reminds Anna of Jude the Obscure. Adrift and lovelorn, she tries unsuccessfully to fend off her attraction, torn between the two men. “How strange it is to leave someone you love for someone you love. You cross a footbridge that has no name, that’s not named in any poem. No, nowhere is a name given to this bridge, and that is why Anna found it so difficult to cross.”
Anne Serre offers here, in her third book in English, her most direct novel to date. The Beginners is unpredictable, sensual, exhilarating, oddly moral, perverse, absurd — and unforgettable.
Review
"Serre (The Governesses) unspools the story of a love affair in her thought-provoking latest... What makes Serre's narrative so layered and complicated is the portrayal of Anna's psyche... This turns a conventional story into something completely and deliciously new." Publishers Weekly
Review
"Strange, beguiling: a jewel." Kirkus
About the Author
The author of fourteen novels and short story books, Anne Serre was born in 1960. Her first novel, Les Gouvernantes, was published in 1992, and praised by Michel Crépu in La Croix for its "remarkable economy of style."
Mark Hutchinson was born in London in 1957 and lives in Paris. Among his many translations are René Char's Hypnos: Notes from the French Resistance and The Inventors and Other Poems.