Zadig Hamroune frees himself from his past in “The Barbarian Night”

Zadig Hamroune frees himself from his past in The Barbarian

“What matters most to me, both as a writer and as a social being, is presence in the world, more than being defined by a written, administrative, social identity or state. civil. »

In “La nuit barbare”, the author engages in the exercise of self-portraiture. Iborn of immigration, he had the trajectory of a studious thug, child of the Republic, bookworm, dancing, singing, mistreated, abused. In his third novel, Zadig Hamroune frees himself from his history and frees himself from his heavy past. A poignant story that takes place in the Norman microcosm where the hostile shadows of the blast furnaces rub shoulders with the consoling silhouettes of the abbeys.

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