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Trade paperback. Set in 1995, this French novel follows the fallout when a waiter is violently attacked by a guest at a restaurant. Similar to Tsiolkas's "The Slap", but from a French perspective. 'Highly intelligent and moving...' "Scotsman"
Paris, June 1995. In a restaurant, a waiter is violently attacked by a guest. No-one moves. Neither the Russian couple, nor the wife of the aggressor, nor the two young traders come to celebrate their first jobs on the floor. An event not worth lingering over?
All actions have consequences. And on this occasion, the brutality, indifference or
…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Trade paperback. Set in 1995, this French novel follows the fallout when a waiter is violently attacked by a guest at a restaurant. Similar to Tsiolkas's "The Slap", but from a French perspective. 'Highly intelligent and moving...' "Scotsman"
Paris, June 1995. In a restaurant, a waiter is violently attacked by a guest. No-one moves. Neither the Russian couple, nor the wife of the aggressor, nor the two young traders come to celebrate their first jobs on the floor. An event not worth lingering over?

All actions have consequences. And on this occasion, the brutality, indifference or cowardice of those present will signal the beginning of their individual undoing. From the fall of the Berlin wall to the financial crash of 2008, in a world defined by wealth, the crossed destinies the actors in this first scene, from Russian oligarch to property speculator weave a web. At its is Sila, the floored immigrant whose refusal to be made a victim will bring the house down.
Autorenporträt
Born in Saint-Cloud in 1967, Fabrice Humbert teaches literature in a French-German lycée near Paris. A previous novel, The Origin of Violence [9781846687501] was published by Serpent's Tail in 2011 and won the first ever French Prix Orange and the Prix Renaudot for best paperback. Sila's Fortune won the 2011 Priz RTL-Lire and the 2010 Prix Jean Jacques Rousseau.
Rezensionen
Praise for Fabrice Humbert:

'Highly intellegent and moving ... a novel of rare scope, substance and strength
Scotsman