Les naufragés by Edmond Haraucourt

(6 User reviews)   920
By Sandra Huynh Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Writing Corner
Haraucourt, Edmond, 1856-1941 Haraucourt, Edmond, 1856-1941
French
Ever wonder what happens when a sophisticated Parisian con artist, bored with all the usual excuses, fakes a shipwreck just to see how everyone reacts? That’s the wild premise of Edmond Haraucourt’s *Les naufragés*, a 19th-century French novel that feels like a twisted reality show before TV even existed. Adolphe Dornance is not your average swindler. He’s charming, rich, and utterly bored. So, he stages an elaborate hoax—making people believe his yacht sank in the North Sea—just to watch the aftermath. But here’s the hard part: when his family holds a funeral and his wife decides to remarry, Adolphe realizes his joke is going very, very wrong. The book isn’t just about the prank. It’s about identity, about how we cling to roles in society, and about a man who literally disappears only to find out who he truly is. No nobles, no wars—just a sharp social satire wrapped in a gripping, comedic mess of decisions. Found your copy yet? I think you’ll want to.
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If you think shows like *The Leftovers* or even *The Truman Show* invented the idea of a man realizing his life has become a gigantic lie, you’re in for a treat with *Les naufragés*. Edmond Haraucourt wrote this thing way back in the 1890s, but man alive—it still feels fresh, smart, and painfully funny.


The Story

Our main guy, Adolphe Dornance, is wealthy, witty, and just plain bored. Living in late 19th-century Paris, he pulls off an audacious prank: he fakes his own death at sea. He makes everyone—including his wife—believe he’s sunk with his yacht off the coast of Norway. The plan? Hang out in exile for a few months, then reveal his so-called naufrage (shipwreck) as a joke.

Only, life for the survivors moves forward faster than Adolphe expects. His wife, sad but practical, begins showing interest in another man. His friends arrange his funeral. And all of a sudden, Adolphe is trapped by his own trick. He’s not dead physically, but he’s legally gone. Cue panic: what if nobody even wants him back?

The book pulls off its twisty moment—this isn’t just a farce; it's a dark, sharp mirror held up to society’s relationship with truth, reputation, and the way we miss people most when they’re probably not coming back. It also traces how a comic hoax slowly morphs into personal tragedy.

Why You Should Read It

Haraucourt writes with a slightly cynical but affectionate gaze at human cluelessness. You’ll snort coffee through your nose at some of the set-pieces (there's tense business around graves, fake telegrams, and sneaky meetings). That said, the deeper strain of loneliness sticks with you.

I recommend this because of the one theme few authors dare: what do people owe their past? Adolphe freely remakes himself mentally, but society acts so slow. A lot of us have felt invisible at some point—this story masterfully explains wanting escape, but you start to tremble once you’re left out. Observational humor aside, there's something bittersweet in how wholeheartedly family stays behind at your burial knowing you inside vanished that still unsettles readers today. Realer than perhaps its era expects.

The translation flows fine for modern readers (older flavor but easy logic) and you rarely trip over any unnecessary description — the prose moves at a cracking conversational pace. Enough characterization saves it from being a single sneer—the w inns feel earned discomfort.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who love Victorian satire like Peer Gynt swapped with farcical rom-com scenes; just cynical enough to sting but soulful enough of surprise make you care.

Probably amazing for folks into psychological “slow burn disambiguations,” plus budding analysis types tracking cultural shifts cause almost no fiction danged perfectly blend “disappearing on your own terms” with its cost so well. Older ones wanting fresh feel will embrace pop conversations using tight focus on wish-fulfillment going over.



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Jennifer Anderson
5 months ago

A brilliant read that I finished in one sitting.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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