Camille (26), künstlerisch begabt, ist magersüchtig und jobbt nachts in einer Putzkolonne, um ihren Lebensunterhalt zu verdienen. Franck (34), arbeitet als Koch in einem Feinschmeckerlokal, mag leichte Mädchen, schnelle Motorräder und seine Großmutter Paulette (83), eine eigensinnige alte Dame, die sich wehrt, in ein Altenheim abgeschoben zu werden. Philibert (36) ist der letzte große Sproß eines verarmten Adelsgeschlechts, der die Geschichte der französischen Könige im Schlaf hersagen kann, aber zu stottern beginnt, wenn er vor einer jungen Frau steht. Er lebt vom Postkartenverkauf in einem Museum, doch er verfügt - bis die Erbstreitigkeiten in der Familie geregelt sind - über eine 300 qm-Wohnung voller alter Bilder und Möbel. Dort finden diese vier grundverschiedenen Menschen zu einer vorübergehenden Wohngemeinschaft zusammen, in der sie lernen, die Tragödien des Alltags gemeinsam zu bestehen. Und dort entsteht eine Liebe, die keiner für möglich gehalten hätte, am wenigsten die, denen sie widerfährt.
Anna Gavalda is a French teacher and award-winning novelist.
Referred to by Voici magazine as "a distant descendant of Dorothy Parker", Anna Gavalda was born in an upper-class suburb of Paris. While working as French teacher in high school, a collection of her short stories was first published in 1999 under the title "Je voudrais que quelqu'un m'attende quelque part" that met with both critical acclaim and commercial success, selling more than three-quarters of a million copies in her native France and winning the 2000 "Grand Prix RTL-Lire." The book was translated into numerous languages including in English and sold in twenty-seven countries. It was published to acclaim in North America in 2003 as "I Wish Someone Were Waiting for Me Somewhere." The book received much praise and is a library and school selection worldwide in several languages.
Gavalda's first novel, Je l'aimais (Someone I Loved) was published in France in February 2002 and later that year in English. Inspired by the failure of her own marriage, it too was a major literary success and a bestseller and was followed by the short (96 pages) juvenile novel 35 kilos d'espoir (95 Pounds of Hope) that she said she wrote "to pay tribute to those of my students who were dunces in school but otherwise fantastic people".
In 2004, her third novel, "Ensemble c'est tout," focused on the lives of four people living in an apartment house: a struggling young artist who works as an office cleaner at night, a young aristocrat misfit, a cook, and an elderly grandmother. The 600-page book is a bestseller in France and has been translated into English as Hunting and Gathering.
As of 2007, her three books have sold more than 3 million copies in France. Ensemble c'est tout was made into a successful movie in 2007 by Claude Berri, with Audrey Tautou and Guillaume Canet. The adaptation of her first novel, Je l'aimais, with Daniel Auteuil and Marie-Josée Croze, was filmed in 2009 by Zabou Breitman.
Divorced, and the mother of two, Gavalda lives in the city of Melun, Seine-et-Marne, about 50 km southeast of Paris. In addition to writing novels, she also contributes to Elle magazine.