When you are born in Metz, family history often resembles a history lesson—or a geography lesson. Haunted by the figure of his grandfather François (alias “Franz”), the narrator of this story sets out in his tracks and gradually discovers his true origins. A sensitive and precise text, in the tradition of W.G. Sebald or Jean Rouaud.
What is memory? For Thierry Hesse, it is first of all a wandering. From the “imperial quarter” built by William II to the forests of the Meuse, from the war of 1870 to that of 1939-45, this genealogical investigation ends in a room in the district of Les Loges, in Metz: the one where Franz/François has spent a part of his life, hidden and yet quite visible.
This book is what Pierre Nora calls a place of memory, where the great and small of history are intertwined. The architecture, the great battles, the childhood, but also the literature (one crossing Franz Kafka and Claude Simon) that orders this intimate space which Thierry Hesse invites us to explore with him.
We find the writing of the author of Démon in this intense story, which puts the reader in front of his own questionings: how to reappropriate a history which is not ours but which builds, in smuggling, the adults that we became? Can we pierce the mystery of a destiny by telling it?