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Review: Happy Are The Happy

How we don't say what we are thinking

August 7, 2014 15:15
Yasmina Reza: it’s all in the head

ByMadeleine Kingsley, Madeleine Kingsley

1 min read

By Yasmina Reza
Harvill Secker, £12.99

Among the Parisiens of Yasmina Reza's outré and witty new novel, happiness is rare and random. But "novel" is not perhaps the mot juste as it's more a sheaf of monologues spoken by the assorted lovers, families, friends, patients, doctors and colleagues of a loosely-knit, largely Jewish, social group.

In effect, it's a play for multiple voices that weave in and out of the episodic action, sometimes meditating on disappointment or dreams, sometimes celebrating a shared confession. Happiness is a quality her rum and privileged characters once knew, desired and lost.

Joy appears in the most unlikely settings - in the cancer clinic, for instance, where an elderly patient puffs up at the compliment that her lynx hat has ennobled the waiting room. In that brief moment, her dread of dying with a shaven head (as if at Auschwitz) and the galling memory of her husband wanting to leave his money to Israel is blessedly eclipsed.