This Strange Eventful History by Claire Messud

A novel that follows a French Algerian family over seven decades

Image | This Strange Eventful History by Claire Messud

(WW Norton)

Over seven decades, from 1940 to 2010, the pieds-noirs Cassars live in an itinerant state—separated in the chaos of World War II, running from a complicated colonial homeland, and, after Algerian independence, without a homeland at all. This Strange Eventful History, told with historical sweep, is above all a family story: of patriarch Gaston and his wife Lucienne, whose myth of perfect love sustains them and stifles their children; of François and Denise, devoted siblings connected by their family's strangeness; of François's union with Barbara, a woman so culturally different they can barely comprehend one another; of Chloe, the result of that union, who believes that telling these buried stories will bring them all peace.
Inspired in part by long-ago stories from her own family's history, Claire Messud animates her characters' rich interior lives amid the social and political upheaval of the recent past. As profoundly intimate as it is expansive,This Strange Eventful History is "a tour de force…one of those rare novels that a reader doesn't merely read but lives through with the characters" (Yiyun Li). (From WW Norton)
This Strange Eventful History was longlisted for the 2024 Giller Prize and the 2024 Booker Prize.
Claire Messud is a Canadian American author with French Algerian roots. Her books include The Emperor's Children, which was longlisted for the Booker in 2006, and When the World Was Steady and The Hunters, which were both finalists for the PEN/Faulkner Award. She has won Guggenheim and Radcliffe Fellowships and the Strauss Living Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She lives in Cambridge, Mass.

Interviews with Claire Messud

Media Audio | Writers and Company : Claire Messud on the stories and secrets of a French Algerian family in The Last Life

Caption: This week, American Canadian novelist Claire Messud. Throughout her career and in her new book, This Strange Eventful History, one of TIME’s most anticipated of 2024, Messud draws on her own family's history, especially that of her French Algerian father. In 2001 she spoke with Eleanor about her novel The Last Life, which traces three generations of a French Algerian family from the perspective of a teenage girl. To conclude the program, Messud reads a chapter from the novel.

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