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iciHaïti - Prix Goncourt 2025 : Haitian writer Yanick Lahens one of the 3 finalists
20/10/2025 09:42:37

iciHaïti - Prix Goncourt 2025 : Haitian writer Yanick Lahens one of the 3 finalists
With her novel "Passagères de nuit", published in August 2025, she is now one of the three finalists. The other two contenders are Pauline Dreyfus, with her novel "Un pont sur la Seine" and Alfred de Montesquiou, for his novel "Le Crépuscule des hommes".

The National Book Directorate (DNL) once again salutes the achievement of novelist Yanick Lahens, who confirms her place among the greats of Haitian and world literature.

The winner of the "Grand Prix du Roman" of the Académie Française will be announced on October 30, 2025.

It is important to note that Yanick Lahens is also among the first shortlisted authors for the Jean Giono Literary Prize.

Summary of "Passagères de nuit" :
"In this new novel, as if plucked from the chaos of her daily life in Port-au-Prince, Yanick Lahens pays homage of hope and resilience to the lineage of women from which she descends.

The first of these, Élizabeth Dubreuil, was born around 1820 in New Orleans. Her grandmother, who arrived from Haiti at the beginning of the century in the wake of the plantation owner who had eventually freed her, never wanted to depend on a man again. Inspired by this powerful example, young Élisabeth rebels in turn against the predatory desires of a friend of her father. She must flee the city, becoming a "Passagères de nuit" (night passengers) on a ship bound for Port-au-Prince. We learn what will become of her when her life intersects with that of Régina, another key figure in this novel of origins.

Born poor among the poor in a hamlet in the south of the island of Haiti, Regina also forced fate : nothing determined her to become the mistress of one of the generals who arrived as liberators in Port-au-Prince in 1867. It is to "my general, my lover, my man" that she addresses the amorous monologue in which she evokes her path to emancipation : the petty cruelty of the masters she fled finds its counterpoint in the outstretched hands of these women who taught her to oppose the blows of fate with silent tenacity.

Elizabeth and Regina inherited this silent tenacity from their distant ancestors, those "Passagères de nuit" (night passengers) of the slave ships, whose terrifying reality Yanick Lahens evokes here, just as it plunges us—and this is not the least of the qualities of this great book—into the convulsions of Haitian history.

When the two heroines meet, in a scene of rare emotion, we, the readers, will understand that history is not written only with the victors, but in the beauty of gestures, glances, and unspoken mysteries, which quietly point the way to a resistance that commands admiration."

See also :
https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-45974-haiti-news-zapping.html
https://www.icihaiti.com/en/news-45702-icihaiti-prix-goncourt-2025-haitian-writer-yanick-lahens-in-the-first-selection.html

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