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BLANC

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Deni Béchard s’envole vers la République démocratique du Congo pour enquêter sur l’insaisissable Richmond Voos, un soi-disant militant écologiste que l’on devine corrompu jusqu’à la moelle. Entre ciel et terre, il fait la connaissance de Sola, une Américaine qui se rend à Kinshasa afin d’aider une jeune orpheline qui se dit possédée par un démon. Leurs recherches permettront de lever le voile sur les conflits d’intérêts qui gangrènent les grandes organisations internationales et sur les tensions raciales encore bien palpables en Afrique comme en Amérique.

Dans un monde où saints et pécheurs se confondent, l’enquête de Deni débouche sur un dédale de nouveaux questionnements touchant aux fondements mêmes de l’identité. Roman magistral, imprévisible et bouleversant, Blanc nous force à voir ce qui, en nous, appartient à l’autre.

320 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2019

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5 stars
11 (14%)
4 stars
26 (33%)
3 stars
32 (41%)
2 stars
6 (7%)
1 star
3 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Amber Bourassa.
159 reviews
January 10, 2026
White: A Novel tackles colonialism and the white savior complex through the eyes of our semi-autobiographical narrator Deni Ellis Béchard.

I was instantly hooked on the first chapter and then as the novel continued it spiraled into so many directions I felt it start to get muddled.

Béchard is definitely a gifted writer structurally. I found the writing to be snappy and I had a lot of fun watching Béchard play with the structure. The afterword almost turns the entire novel up on its head.

I was in between giving the novel two or three stars but after reading interviews with Béchard I loved the idea of what this novel was and was attempting to tackle. Even if this particular story wasn't wholly riveting for me I am definitely interested in reading more of Béchard's other works.
Profile Image for Judith.
66 reviews
April 27, 2019
This book was interesting. There were parts that made me think it was going somewhere really good rather than rehashing familiar-seeming tropes and devices, but then it didn't. By the time I finished reading the 'Afterword', however, I guessed that was the point. The last three pages of the afterword could either be the author being clever and showing that he'd created a flawed narrator because that's the story he wanted to write - or perhaps it's even the author saying that he purposely created a flawed narrator as a way of acknowledging that he perhaps isn't able to present the issues described in an unbiased way without falling into some kind of stereotyping along the way.

I guess I could've thought of that earlier in the book when the narrator's self-absorbed tone irked me, but it ended up making the afterword the best part of the book, putting it in the light needed to appreciate it.
I have a suspicion I could get a lot out of rereading this (probably more so if I actually read Conrad's 'Heart of Darkness' first...).

*EDIT*
This is an interview with the author that definitely explains the narrator aspect more: https://www.forewordreviews.com/artic...

Quote from it: 'I wanted to explore the ways that white people can, in many ways, be “painfully self-aware,” as you say, while also being part of a racist culture that we reinforce with our actions. By making the fictional aspect of the character questionable, I hoped to introduce an element of discomfort. It is far easier to judge a fictional character while assuming that the author is self-aware and writing from a moral high ground than it is to question whether the author himself deserves to be judged and even read.'
I strongly recommend reading the interview... it's a lot more helpful than my review.

This does make me curious to read some of his other works.
Profile Image for Sabrina Blais.
52 reviews8 followers
November 13, 2020
Ce livre est très bien écrit et la prémisse est intéressante, mais je trouve que l’histoire était confuse par moment. Je trouvais aussi la fin précipitée, à mon avis. Malgré tout j’ai bien aimé le roman.
39 reviews
June 4, 2022
I loved this book, it was like looking into a hall of mirrors. Accurate and searing description of white supremacy and imperialism.
Profile Image for JL Salty.
2,019 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2024
Rating: pg-13 for child prostitution - not explicit but very much a part of the story. Some profanity.
Recommend: adult readers. This book tackles racism from a new angle, thoughtfully written.

I think the “journalist” narrator gave this book an avenue to ask questions that might not normally be tackled directly, especially perhaps by a white author. Did not love the magical realism feel - it’s never been my favorite genre - but I think it presented some plot lines that helped the author make his point.

Interview from the author: https://www.forewordreviews.com/artic...
And go read Judith’s review - she said a lot of the things I was thinking.
626 reviews7 followers
September 1, 2020
This book started promisingly enough but lost focus and got weird. There were some very interesting and salient points made but the outcome was so abrupt it didn’t make sense. Overall the book just didn’t hang together. 2.5 rounded up because it was an interesting book to discuss in book group.
Profile Image for April.
959 reviews6 followers
February 18, 2024
Nope. Purposefully echoes Heart of Darkness, and has a similar alienating and off-putting feel. It's the point, but I couldn't intellectualize it enough to appreciate... I just didn't like it and don't think it does what it's meant to do.
131 reviews
June 29, 2024
Interesting and unique perspective on Congo - and how race plays into perceptions. Clever
29 reviews
July 3, 2024
A compelling novel that raises hard questions around colonialism and capitalism and the intersections with race.
85 reviews
June 7, 2024
Well, I (kind of) listened to Heart of Darkness on audiobook last year, but couldn't get into it at all and ended up paying very little attention and getting very little enjoyment. This audiobook was more interesting to me than that one, despite its constant references to Kurtzes. I don't know that I really enjoyed it a whole lot more though. I was certainly confused by the end at how much of the book was fiction vs. based on the author's real life. Is that an attribute people like in books? If so, read this book!
Profile Image for Noémie Courtois.
271 reviews1 follower
February 14, 2019
Plutôt un 3.5
J’ai aimé l’histoire, le style d’écriture et les inclusions concernant la vie de l’auteur, mais on dirait que je ne me suis pas attachée au livre, ni aux personnages. La réflexion que le livre alimente est pourtant très intéressante, mais encore une fois, on dirait que tout ça était très loin de moi ( je ne sais pas vraiment comment l’expliquer). J’ai cependant hâte de lire les autres livres de cet auteur!
Profile Image for Catheriiine J.
188 reviews2 followers
September 11, 2019
J'ai été un peu déçue. J'ai l'impression que la mauvaise histoire a été écrite. L'histoire de la petite fille me semblait plus intéressante que celle sur laquelle le focus a été mis.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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