International Dublin Literary Award
The Adversary: A True Story of Monstrous Deception
Carrère follows the true story of Jean-Claude Romand, who maintained an 18-year fiction about being a doctor and researcher before murdering his family. Rather than merely reconstructing the crime, he explores self-deception and the shape of evil in a cool, restrained voice.
Work Information
It reads the collapse of a long deception not simply as a crime report, but as an encounter with human inscrutability.
Based on a real case, The Adversary traces the unraveling of a life built on years of lies while looking at the psychology and family collapse surrounding the crime. More than a journalistic reconstruction, it quietly asks how evil can wear an ordinary face.
Review Summaries
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Readers are drawn to the book's chilling precision, while some are unsettled by its emotional distance. What lingers is not only the crime itself but the unnerving psychology that sustained the lie.
Book Information
- Publisher
- Metropolitan Books
- Published
- 2001-01-01
- Pages
- 191 pages
- Language
- 英語
- Size
- 13.97 x 2.2 x 22.35 cm
- ISBN-13
- 9780805065831
- ISBN-10
- 0805065830
- Price
- 10602 JPY
- Category
- 洋書/Nonfiction/True Accounts
The true story of a man who spun a web of lies around his life takes readers deep inside the mind of a psychotic man who managed to convince thousands of people that he was a successful, credentialed physician. 25,000 first printing.
Emmanuel Carrère is one of France's most critically acclaimed writers, author of screenplays, a biography of Philip K. Dick, and two novels, including Class Trip , which won the prestigious Prix Femina. A major bestseller in France, The Adversary is being published in eighteen countries. Carrère lives in Paris. Emmanuel Carrère , novelist, filmmaker, journalist, and biographer, is the award-winning internationally renowned author of The Adversary (a New York Times Notable Book), Lives Other Than My Own , My Life As A Russian Novel , Class Trip and The Mustache . Carrère lives in Paris.
Reviews
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A Long Newspaper Article
Interesting but nothing that couldn't have been included in a ten page Sunday supplement article. Perhaps the translation also didn't help?
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Amazing ⭐️⭐️⭐️
5 starts. This book is amazing and I read it in one day. Based on a true story and absolutely chilling. Definitely one to get if you like crime based books.
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I am always curious about the psychology of serial murderers ...
I am always curious about the psychology of serial murderers, and I hoped to gain some insight into this dark side of human nature. Although I didn't get much insight from this book, this author's approach to his writing about Romands was intriguing enough to keep me engaged.
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One of the most literary crime stories I've ever read
The author wrote this in French, and there is a wonderfully lyric quality to a very difficult story. A superb read.
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Riveting True Crime Story
Emmanuel Carrère's true crime story The Adversary begins with one of the most arresting first lines I have ever read: "On the Saturday morning of January 9, 1993, while Jean-Claude Romand was killing his wife and children, I was with mine in a parent-teacher meeting at the school attended by Gabriel, our eldest son." What follows is the nearly unbelievable story of Romand, who deceived his family and his closest friends for eighteen years, convincing them that he was a prominent doctor employed in Geneva by the World Health Organization. In fact, Romand had never finished medical school, and he spent his days reading newspapers in cafes or taking walks in the woods. He supported himself and his family on money he swindled from friends and relatives, trusting souls who, incredibly, rarely asked about the status of the considerable sums Romand had allegedly invested for them. Romand's story might be just bizarrely amusing--a French variation of the life of deceit adopted by Leonardo DiCaprio's character in Catch Me If You Can, albeit with a less clever protagonist--were it not for what happened next. When Romand's deceit was likely to be uncovered--he had drained dry the well of his acquaintances' bank accounts--he murdered his wife and his parents, his five-year-old son and his daughter, and he tried, but only half-heartedly, to kill himself. As the first sentence of Carrère's book suggests, the author periodically interjects his own experiences and responses into his narrative. He is clearly concerned with separating himself from the small "club" of Jean-Claude's devotees, Christian prison visitors who have come to admire the murderer in his new role as repentant sinner, the anguished prisoner who has found God and, condemned to life, assumes his suffering as some sort of expiation for his crimes. Carrère is rightly appalled--at least to an extent--by these do-gooders, and he does manage to succeed, I think, in distancing himself from them. The author is decidedly not an apologist for Romand. Carrère's account of Romand's life and crimes, meanwhile, despite its horrific subject matter, is riveting.