
Ulizica
"The Flatterer", one of Françoise Sagan's later novels, is the story of an ordinary accountant, Guéret, who becomes obsessed with a passion for a young, mysterious woman and her false illusions about him.
In the small industrial town of Cardin in northern France, a modest and unremarkable accountant, Guéret, encounters a stray dog that follows him home every evening. But the real change comes when he meets the young and seductive Élisabeth, who sees in him something he himself has never been – a strong, interesting, almost heroic man.
Guéret, a hitherto passive and average man, begins to live in the delusion of another's gaze. This illusion slowly transforms him, awakening in him passion, jealousy, courage, but also dangerous obsessions. Sagan masterfully shows how another's perception can shape identity and how love based on false assumptions becomes destructive and tragic.
As in most of his works, Sagan dissects bourgeois boredom, loneliness, sexuality, and the lies that people tell themselves and others. The novel is shorter, more concentrated, with her signature elegant, cynical, and melancholic style – full of subtle psychological analysis and the soul-crushing atmosphere of gray, rainy provincial life.
The Flatterer is an intimate drama about transformation through the eyes of another, about the power of illusion, and the price we pay when we try to become someone else. A classic Sagan for fans of her refined, slightly cynical prose about love, lust, and self-deception.
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