What a brilliant, crackling book. Gerty Dambury's The Restless (translated from French by Judith C. Miller) is one of the best-paced literary dances I've ever read. In its purported dance-like structure (designed around the Guadeloupean quadrille, as a framing style), the book has a stunning call-and-response between the different narrators (many of whom are, no big deal, ghosts) as it builds its story.
Émilienne is the central character, around whom most of the other narratives revolve. At the novel's opening, she sits outside, waiting for her father to come home. She is worried about her teacher, who has abruptly disappeared. Oh, and there's absolute chaos in the streets of Guadeloupe circa May 1967. Émilienne is in "conversation" with the ghosts of her neighbors and semi-strangers, while her numerous older siblings vaguely intervene in the story to convey their concern. Bit by bit, we learn about what's driving Émilienne to sit outside, what's going on, and how things got here. It's not a particularly epic story, but it is most definitely a wide one, and Dambury is remarkable at setting her story at a brisk, snapping pace. (After finishing the book, I learned that she is predominantly a playwright, which somehow makes perfect sense - The Restless is so relentlessly well-paced that it seems only right to come from the hands of someone for whom pacing is a critical part of the craft.)
Gerty Dambury is, alas, a woefully underappreciated writer in English. If The Restless is any indication, she is the sort of writer who needs to be a household name, not someone who as of writing this review doesn't have a Wikipedia article in English. The Restless is SO good in so many different ways, from the clever structure, to the intelligently conversational writing, to the emotionally affecting build-up in making the reader even care about Émilienne and her family. This is a particularly easy book to recommend for fans of experimental fiction (again through that unique dance setup), but it remains wholly enjoyable for those who maybe don't seek out those sorts of internal techniques - I personally often struggle with experimental fiction when it feels like there's not much beyond the technical exercise, but The Restless never feels like that. It's a sharp, smart, well-written, enlightening, and thoughtful book. Highly recommended.