Sleeping Children: 'Magnificent' Annie Ernaux
By (Author) Anthony Passeron
Translated by Frank Wynne
Pan Macmillan
Picador
10th June 2025
6th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
843.92
Paperback
208
Width 136mm, Height 216mm, Spine 19mm
228g
It is 1981. As a wave of puzzling medical cases sweeps across the US, a Parisian doctor is presented with a rare case of a disease long thought to be eradicated. It marks the beginning of a race on both sides of the Atlantic to make sense of a deadly virus that will define a generation. Miles away in rural France, Anthony Passeron's family are dealing with a crisis of their own. Their small village is gripped by another epidemic - heroin addiction. Anthony's uncle Dsir, once the pride of the family, has become one of its many 'sleeping children'. Often found unconscious on street corners, he is a stranger to his family. As Dsir's life descends into chaos, the thunder of the AIDS crisis grows closer. These two stories - one intimate, one global - are about to collide. For readers of douard Louis, Douglas Stuart and Annie Ernaux, Sleeping Children is a moving and eye-opening book about shame and the slow poisoning of a family by the secrets it keeps. Exploring the stories of the heroic few who fought for a cure for AIDs and for justice for a community abandoned, it is a radical vision of a history reshaped, retold and remembered.
Without ever raising your voice, you have shattered the family silence that scabbed over tragedy and produced a work so powerful, so moving that it lingers long after reading. Magnificent! -- Annie Ernaux, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
Anthony Passeron was born in Nice in 1983. He teaches French Literature and Humanities at a secondary school. Les enfants endormis (Sleeping Children) is his first novel.