

Review: easy read and understand - Well written story once I started it I couldnât put it down . Amazing turn of events and surprising outcome it makes you think hard about the way a working woman is gets trapped between her children and her career. It has happened to all of us. I dislike domestic helpers I rather have a dirty home than a nounou. Review: Classic French Novel - depicting a slow psychological decline. The added value is the intelligent analysis of class distinctions and of parental mores. Dependence and exploitation become mingled. The writing is fine but nothing extraordinary, and with the exception of Louise, I won't remember the characters all that well.
| Best Sellers Rank | #297,713 in Kindle Store ( See Top 100 in Kindle Store ) #87 in Literature & Fiction in French #167 in French Language Fiction #2,302 in Contemporary Literary Fiction |
N**H
easy read and understand
Well written story once I started it I couldnât put it down . Amazing turn of events and surprising outcome it makes you think hard about the way a working woman is gets trapped between her children and her career. It has happened to all of us. I dislike domestic helpers I rather have a dirty home than a nounou.
K**E
Classic French Novel
depicting a slow psychological decline. The added value is the intelligent analysis of class distinctions and of parental mores. Dependence and exploitation become mingled. The writing is fine but nothing extraordinary, and with the exception of Louise, I won't remember the characters all that well.
K**A
Don't let the beginning scare you off.
I started this before going on a trip and planned to read it on my Kindle. After reading a bit, I decided to read something else, something that wouldn't keep me awake at night. But - I read it after getting home. This is a great read. Not really a horror novel, although some horrible things happen. It's very well organized, well-written, insightful.
Z**A
second rate horror novel
I read this book because the author won a Goncourt prize. This book is well written. I don't know what the author was trying to say. Was the book social criticism. Mothers shouldn't work because there is no good child care. I found that the book dragged.
R**E
The Nanny
Birdlike, blonde Louise, hardly bigger than a girl herself, is a magician with children. At her interview with the busy MassĂ© parents in their Paris apartment, she gently takes the squalling baby Adam from his father's arms, calming him instantly, and entices the toddler Mila out of hiding by pretending that she is a princess who has disappeared. Myriam, the children's mother, returns from her first day back at work as an advocate to find that Louise has totally tidied the cramped apartment, seemingly doubling it in size. When the nanny also shows her abilities as a cook, the father, Paul, who manages and records popular musicians, proudly invites friends and colleagues to enjoy the dinners prepared by their perfect nanny. Within weeks, Louise has become one of the family. It seems a miracle. But LeĂŻla Slimani opens her book with the shocking words: "Le bĂ©bĂ© est mort." The baby dead, the girl fatally wounded, the apartment bathroom a scene of carnage, the father away on business, the mother in shock. At first, it seems like a crime novel, working backwards to enable us to solve, or at least to understand, the murders. Yet Slimani is more subtle than that. Over the three or four years when Louise is working for the MassĂ©sâwith occasional flashbacks to her previous employments, her life with her late husband, and troubles with her own daughterâthe author paints a complex but instantly recognizable picture of contemporary social life. Unlike a mystery novel, there are few dark secrets waiting to be discovered, simply a developing subtext of class and privilege. Louise is no murderess in waiting, but a rather sad woman who neglects her own life to live vicariously through the perfect care of her charges. The MassĂ©s are struggling young professionals, living in the smallest apartment in their building. When they share their lives with Louise, even taking her on holiday to the Greek Islands, their affection is genuine. LeĂŻla Slimani was born in Morocco in 1981, and came to France at the age of 17. CHANSON DOUCE, her second novel, won her the prestigious Prix Goncourt in 2016; it became an instant best-seller in France and awaits translation here. Race indeed plays a role in the subtext of class in the book, but it is a measure of the author's subtlety that she treats it only indirectly. It is Myriam, the rising lawyer, who is the Arabic-speaking immigrant; if there is any racism in the book, it is in her reluctance to hire a North African nanny who would seek a false sisterhood with her on grounds of language. But Louise is white. Her friend Wafa, indeed, is an undocumented immigrant, but she plays a minor role in the plot. Slimani's message is that life can deal a rotten hand to anyone; there is no need to look only to obvious factors to explain it. Myriam, defending an accused murderer in the course of her work, tells him: "We have to prove that you, you also are a victim." The case has nothing to do with the main plot, but everything to do with Slimani's theme. For when she is done, that is precisely how we see Louise: as a victimânot of others, but of life itself.
L**R
THE PERFECT NANNY by Leila Slimani Leila Slimaniâs Prix Goncourt-âwinning novel ...
THE PERFECT NANNY by Leila Slimani Leila Slimaniâs Prix Goncourt-âwinning novel delves into the torÂmented mind of Louise, the ultiÂmate nanny, who douÂbles as houseÂkeeper, gourmet chef, and orgaÂnizer of chilÂdrensâ parÂties and outÂings, withÂout extra pay. Sheâs also a workÂing parentâs worse nightÂmare: a woman whose doll-âlike, Mary PopÂpins exteÂrior conÂceals a damÂaged psyÂche rife with resentÂment, obsesÂsion, and rage. THE PERÂFECT NANNY chronÂiÂcles the relaÂtionÂship between Paul and MyrÂiam, two ambiÂtious proÂfesÂsionÂals in Parisâs tony 10th arrondisseÂment, and Louise, the nanny too good to be true who does the unthinkable. âSheâs our employee, not our friend,â Paul reminds his wife, but because Louise has become so invaluÂable, itâs a point they both keep conÂveÂniently overlooking. Thereâs no mysÂtery here as far as the crime. On the first page, weâre told, âThe baby is dead.â The quesÂtion, of course, is not who murÂdered baby Adam and his older sisÂter Mila, but what demons drove Louise to kill them. To that end, SliÂmani takes us into her stark and lonely world, the sparse apartÂment where she spends as litÂtle time as posÂsiÂble, the abuÂsive husÂband who left her with crushÂing debts, the landÂlord who hounds her for money. Her days spent in her employÂersâ chic apartÂment mean freeÂdom to Louise, and she makes the most of them. With the older child at school and the parÂents workÂing, she luxÂuÂriÂates in a long, hot shower, then glides nude around the apartÂment, her skin pearlesÂcent with Miryamâs expenÂsive creams. Only occaÂsionÂally does the unseemly surÂface, as when Paul comes home to find Louise has tarted up his daughÂter in full glamÂour make-âup. DisÂgusted, he pulls away from Louise after that, but by then the unequal relaÂtionÂship has proÂgressed too far, makÂing Louise almost imposÂsiÂble to disÂlodge. While Louise obsesses over whether MyrÂiam is pregÂnant again, the parÂents ponÂder ways to graceÂfully let her go. Itâs that terÂriÂble disÂparÂity â the nannyâs fanÂtasies of being part of a famÂily when she is, in fact, hired help â that brings the novel back full cirÂcle to its devÂasÂtatÂing openÂing lines. Although the endÂing disÂapÂpoints, leavÂing the reader to the obserÂvaÂtions of the police detecÂtive going over the scene, as a whole I found the novel engrossÂing on many levÂels â as a crime thriller and as a social comÂmenÂtary on class disÂtincÂtion, ecoÂnomic disÂparÂity, and motherhood.
M**N
Spellbinding
I could not put this book down. My French reading ability is limited but this one is not a difficult read. It is a feast paced psycho thriller that has unexpected depths That make it a great read. The structure of the novel is simple but there is complexity here that is very thought provocative. In short. It is a damn good read
F**I
Gripping
Weâre aware of the tragic ending from the beginning and we follow the baby sitter as she evolves from unbelievable perfection to murderer. I âm not convinced by the actual process but the writing and the atmosphere are really perfect.
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