PARIS:
France’s top literary prize, the Goncourt, on Wednesday went to Jerome
Ferrari for a Corsican epic about dashed hopes, set in a village bar on
the troubled Mediterranean island.
“Le Sermon sur
la Chute de Rome” (The Sermon on the Fall of Rome) tells of a young man
who packs in his philosophy studies to open a bar on the island with an
old friend, hoping to turn it into a haven of peace and friendship.
But
things take a radically different turn as drink, sex, corruption — and
the violence for which Corsica has become known — cast their shadow over
the young idealists’ plans.
“Did you know that Barack
Obama was re-elected today? Don’t you think we should put things in
perspective?” the novelist joked with reporters pressing him for a
reaction to receiving the century-old prize.
Born into
a Corsican family settled on the mainland, Ferrari returned as an adult
to teach high school philosophy in the Corsican capital Ajaccio. He now
teaches in Abu Dhabi.
His Goncourt win comes with
Corsica making headlines over a jump in violence, with 38 murders and
117 attempted murders since the start of 2011, for a population of just
over 300,000 — the highest homicide rate in Europe.
Most
of the slayings, police believe, have been linked to feuds over control
of protection rackets targeting tourist businesses and lucrative
property development on an island that remains relatively unspoiled. But
this is no crime novel.
The Goncourt jury called the
book a “fine parable on contemporary hopelessness, but with a hopeful
message: the end of a world doesn’t have to spell the end of the world.”
Its title refers to a sermon delivered by the
mediaeval philosopher Augustine following the 410 sack of Rome, from
which Ferrari quotes the lines,
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