Monsieur and Madame Rivaz

Catherine Lovey

French, Éditions Zoé, Carouge, 2016

“Monsieur and Madame Rivaz have been an unexpected haven, without ever doing anything in particular. And I hope I’ve given them a little bit of happiness in return. Words are still alive when they speak them. When Juste talks about the crags or when Hermine talks about her plants, you can see them – you can even feel the sun lingering on them at the end of the day.”

Review by Romy Fursland


A young woman, a tour guide on a cruise ship, befriends an elderly couple after they announce politely that they would ‘prefer not to’ go on the luxury cruise their son has booked for them. They ’d rather go to see a film. This old-fashioned modesty creates a turning- point in the young woman’s life. The couple’s kindness, generosity and appreciation of simple pleasures help her cling onto her own humanity in the face of the demands of modern life.

Monsieur and Madame Rivaz by Catherine Lovey is an acerbically funny novel, and ruthless in its critique of twentyfirst-century society and the political and philosophical issues it raises. One young woman’s friendship with a kind, elderly couple called Juste and Hermine Rivaz is held up as the antidote to everything she perceives as being wrong with the modern world: corporate greed, rigid state bureaucracy, self-serving attitudes and the impersonal nature of our interactions with other people. One particularly vivid illustration of this is her run-in with the Rivazes’ son, an obnoxious man who assumes she has only befriended his parents for financial gain. The very opposite is the case: Monsieur and Madame Rivaz slowly become an anchor in the life of the young woman, who feels lost in her fast-paced world with its multiple choices.

It would be a real treat for any translator to try to capture the narrator’s black humour and her many moods: ironic, caustic and idealistic by turns. The characterisation of Juste and Hermine Rivaz is another of the novel’s great strengths: two wise and lovable characters, quite unlike anything you find today in the literary mainstream.

Title
Monsieur et Madame Rivaz
Publisher
Éditions Zoé, Carouge
Translation rights
Laure Pécher, Agency Astier-Pécher, lpecher@pierreastier.com
Publication date
March 2016
Pages
320
ISBN
978-2-88927-316-4

Author

Catherine Lovey

Catherine Lovey comes from the canton of Valais. She studied International Relations and Criminology before becoming a journalist, writing on economic and financial affairs. Her first novel was L’Homme interdit (2005), followed by Cinq vivants pour un seul mort (2008), Un roman russe et drôle (2010) and Monsieur et Madame Rivaz (2016).

Photo: Yvonne Böhler