Nobel-prize winner François Mauriac's masterpiece is Thérèse Desqueyroux, the
story of a complex woman trapped by provincial life. First published in 1927, this
astonishing and daring novel has echoes of Madame Bovary and has recently been made
into a ravishing film starring Amélie actress Audrey Tautou.
Thérèse Desqueyroux walks free from court, acquitted of trying to poison her husband.
Everyone knew she'd tried to do it, but family honour was more important than the truth.
As she travels home to the gloomy forests of Argelouse, Thérèse looks back over the
marriage that brought her nothing but stifling darkness, and wonders, has she really
escaped punishment or is it only just about to begin?
François Mauriac was born in Bordeaux in 1885. He left his university studies to devote
himself to writing, and published a collection of poems, Les Mains jointes
(Clasped Hands), in 1909. He married in 1913 and the following year was mobilized
to serve in the First World War with the Auxilliary Medical Squad in Thessalonica.
Mauriac's major literary breakthrough came in 1922 with a novel called Le Baiser au
lepreux (A Kiss for the Leper). His most famous work, Thérèse
Desqueroux, appeared in 1927 and has been made into a film twice: first in 1962, with
Emmanuelle Riva in the lead role, and more recently in 2012, in a version starring Audrey
Tautou. In 1933 Mauriac was elected a Member of the French Academy and in 1952 he received
the Nobel Prize for Literature. He died in Paris in 1970.
'A great novel ... the brilliance of its structure and the elegance of its prose never
fail to take my breath away' - Beryl Bainbridge