What most struck me about the
memoir Lives Other than My Own (D'autres
vies que la mienne, 2009), by Emmanuel Carrère, was its intimate intrusion into the experiences and
emotions of people under great distress. The first 45 pages of the book focus
on Thailand on January 1, 2004, where Carrère and his partner Hélène were
vacationing. This is the day of the tsunami, and although Carrère
and his partner are only on the periphery of it, they are first-hand witnesses
to the grief of other people, especially a young couple who lose their
three-year-old daughter. The next section of the novel, which is the main portion
of the book, narrates the illness and death of Hélène’s sister, Juliette, from metastasized
breast cancer. The writer interviews her husband and her fellow colleague judge
Etienne, with whom she has a close but nonsexual relationship.
The sudden and abrupt transition
from the tsunami to the death of Juliette is intentional. It's a way of showing
that tragedy, disaster, can come in any number of forms to many different
people, ultimately to all people.
Carrère's tone is casual and
sympathetic, yet at the same time he assumes an attitude of objectivity, not
only towards the people he's writing about, but about himself. He makes clear
that on the occasion of the tsunami he and Hélène are on the verge of deciding
to split up. A partial result of their involvement with the people who suffered
loss from the tsunami, and with the death of Juliette, is the strengthening of
their relationship. Yet even in the end, despite his near certainty that the
relationship will end only when one of the two of them die, he admits the
possibility of a premature end due to boredom or illness or wandering eyes.
There are times of great
discomfort in reading this book: we learn virtually everything there is to know
about the primary characters: Hélène, her sister Juliette and her husband
Patrice, her friend Etienne, their children and their parents. He delves into
intimate aspects of their lives. Etienne and Juliette both suffered childhood cancer. Etienne lost a leg as a result, while Juliet
was left unable to use her legs due to an error made by her doctor when she was
undergoing radiation therapy. This experience held in common bonds them. One of
the most interesting figures in the book, perhaps the most interesting, is Etienne,
who is talkative, candid, and willing to speak his mind without concern about his
listener’s reaction. He answers the author's questions with candor. That is
part of the reason for the discomfort that one might feel with this memoir: the
details of sex lives, the author’s discovery that the body of the three-year-old
girl who drowned in the tsunami is decaying in the hospital and the associated smell,
the details of Juliette's last hours and minutes, the interactions of various
members of their family. One feels in reading this book that he is intruding
on, invading, the most private spaces of the characters’ lives.
Carrère makes clear that he gave
both Patrice and Etienne the opportunity to read his manuscript and ask for
changes. They asked for few changes, mainly small details.
What will it be like to die,
when the time comes? How does it feel to know that one’s own death is imminent?
What is it like to lose one's life partner? Or to lose one's child? I do not
want to know some of the answers. These are questions Lives Other than My Own investigates.
The translation is excellent,
and one never senses that this is a translated work.
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