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Live Fast: A Prix Goncourt-Winning Autobiographical Elegy on Love, Loss, and Fate

Prix Goncourt

Live Fast: A Prix Goncourt-Winning Autobiographical Elegy on Love, Loss, and Fate

Brigitte Giraud

A quiet novel that traces the choices and accidents leading to a fatal crash, then returns to grief and memory. Its restrained narration sharpens the outline of love rather than softening it.

losschance and fatememorymarital loveautobiographical fiction

Work Information

A look back at the irreversible choices that came before the crash.

Brigitte Giraud follows the memory of the accident that killed her husband and quietly examines what led to that ending. A house purchase, renovation plans, and a series of small daily decisions gradually connect into an irreversible event, traced here with the pain of loss still present.

Review Summaries

  • Readers value the confessional force of the grief narrative and the tense structure that follows the chain of causes leading to the accident. Many say the restrained tone makes the pain linger more strongly.

Book Information

Publisher
Ecco
Published
2025-02-11
Pages
176 pages
Language
英語
Size
13.97 x 1.65 x 20.96 cm
ISBN-13
9780063346727
ISBN-10
0063346729
Price
3992 JPY
Category
洋書/Mystery & Thrillers/Thrillers/Psychological & Suspense

Winner of the Prix Goncourt A powerful autobiographical novel of loss, an unforgettable memoir of grief, and the small decisions that define the course of fate. Paced and structured with the inevitable suspense of a countdown, Brigitte Giraud’s tense and haunting work of literary fiction follows one woman’s relentless quest to comprehend the motorcycle accident that took the life of her partner Claude at age 41. The narrator of Live Fast recounts the chain of events that led up to the fateful accident, tracing the tiny, maddening twists of fate that might have prevented its tragic outcome. Each chapter asks the rhetorical question, “what if,” departing from an image or memory from early years in Algeria during the war, to moving to the suburbs of Lyon, buying and renovating a home where they could “put down their suitcase for a whole life.” A sensitive elegy to her husband and a subtle, precise vision of a lasting love, Live Fast is a moving and electrifying portrait of love and loss, reminding us that living itself can be dangerous.

Brigitte Giraud is a French writer and novelist and the author of fourteen books. She received the 2022 Prix Goncourt for Live Fast , which was also a big bestseller in France. Live Fast is her first book to be published in English.

Reviews

  • Delicious Read

    Live Fast by Brigitte Giraud (translated by Cory Stockwell) Giraud is serving grief on a countdown plate. The story follows a woman trying to understand the motorcycle accident that took her partner Claude, and instead of telling it straight, she breaks it apart like she is trying to undo time itself. Every chapter is a "what if." What if this had not happened. What if that choice went differently. What if fate had just... shifted a few inches to the left. We go from early love in Algeria, to building a life in Lyon, to the quiet domestic details that feel so ordinary you almost forget how fragile they are. Then suddenly, nothing is ordinary anymore. And the wild part is how personal it gets. The "if onlys" are not neat or logical. They are intimate, sometimes irrational, sometimes painfully self directed. Giraud even turns the lens on herself, asking what role she played in the chain of events, knowing full well the answer will not bring anyone back. But that is the point. There is no undo button. This is grief as pattern recognition. Love as something that keeps existing even after it has nowhere to go. And fate, not as something dramatic, but as a series of small decisions you never realize are irreversible until they already are. It is short, sharp, and quietly devastating. Less than 200 pages, but it lingers like a conversation you replay in your head at 2am. And maybe that is the truth of it. We do not move on from the "what ifs." We just learn to live beside them.

  • Translate more to English please!

    Fantastic book. I hope she’ll have more of her work translated in to English. A unique and movingly written perspective. Well deserving of the prize.

  • a must-read

    This novel reads like a work of nonfiction. It captures the “what ifs” that emerge when something tragic or unwanted happens.

  • One of the most boring & disappointing books I have ever read

    This entire book is about this woman still processing her grief 20 years after the fact of her husband's death. OK... but she goes off into ridiculous tangents that make it a really boring read. The final insult to injury is when she talks to a participant in the accident who shares her husband's last words ... which she never shares!! I really have difficulty understanding how a book like this gets impressive reviews.

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