L'absence by Henri Ardel
Henri Ardel's L'absence is a quiet, haunting novel that gets under your skin. Published in the late 19th century, it feels surprisingly modern in its exploration of psychology and memory.
The Story
The plot is deceptively simple. Our protagonist, a middle-aged man named Alain, has a good job, a comfortable home, and a circle of friends. On the surface, his life is complete. But one morning, he's struck by a profound and unsettling sensation: a gap. He feels with absolute certainty that something essential is missing from his existence, but his mind offers no clues. It's not a lost object or a forgotten appointment. It's the absence of a presence he can no longer name.
The rest of the book is Alain's journey. He doesn't travel far physically, but he descends deep into his own past and present. He scrutinizes his relationships, revisits old haunts, and examines every corner of his routine, looking for the source of this hollow feeling. The tension comes from watching a rational man grapple with an irrational, deeply emotional void. Is he losing his mind, or has he truly forgotten something—or someone—of immense importance?
Why You Should Read It
This book is a masterclass in mood. Ardel doesn't use big, dramatic events. Instead, he builds unease through small, precise details—the way a familiar room suddenly feels foreign, or how a friend's laughter rings slightly hollow. You feel Alain's frustration and creeping dread right alongside him.
What really got me was how it made me reflect. We all have these unspoken foundations in our lives: the love we take for granted, the routines that shape us, the memories that define us. L'absence asks a terrifying question: what if one of those foundations was silently removed? Would we even know what we were grieving?
Final Verdict
This isn't a book for someone craving fast-paced action or a neat resolution. It's a slow, contemplative, and deeply atmospheric read. Perfect for anyone who loves character-driven stories, psychological depth, and that special kind of melancholy you find in authors like Stefan Zweig or some of Edgar Allan Poe's quieter tales. If you're willing to sit with a beautifully crafted sense of unease and don't mind a story that lives in questions more than answers, L'absence is a forgotten gem worth rediscovering.
Richard Jackson
1 year agoGreat digital experience compared to other versions.