Olivier Adam came close to winning the Goncourt Prize in 2007 ("L'abri de rien") and is long-listed once again with "Le coeur régulier." The narrator of this moving novel is a woman, Sarah, whose brother, Nathan, died under mysterious circumstances, which she presumes to have been suicide. She and her brother, while growing up together, shared a strong sense of alienation--a sense that they were misfits. At one point, however, Sarah opted to marry "an ever so perfect" man and to blend into the respectable world of work and privilege, a decisions which more-or-less alienated her from her brother. Shaken from this life by Nathan's death, she leaves her husband and two children to go to Japan, a place her brother visited and found some peace of mind and sense of hope. In Japan Sarah meets a character who is in some ways the quiet center of this novel: Natsume, a retired policeman who spends his time wandering the cliffs above the sea near his home dissuading the lonely and lost from leaping to their death in this famous suicide spot. Natsume is one of those unusual people who concerns himself with the lost, with those for whom nobody else has time. But he is no moralizer, and this is no moralizing novel. Natsume simply feels that for many there are moments of suicidal despair, and at such moments one needs the care of another without that person posing as the bearer of some moral truth. Sarah's search for a remnant of her brother's soul is also a search for her own soul, and it brings her to Natsume and his mostly non-verbal care. While her search yields no ultimate answers, she does find some relief and returns to France, albeit not to the false world of work and family in which she lived before. This is an extremely sad novel, but standing at the core is Natsume, who offers a different and simpler way of being. One final word of warning for the non-native reader of French. The vocabulary in this novel is quite rich, and, moreover, Adam employs at times a stream-of-consciousness style that dispenses with punctuation. In other words, fairly hard going . . . at least for this reader, but certainly worth the effort!