La petite faunesse : roman by Charles Derennes

(5 User reviews)   735
Derennes, Charles, 1882-1930 Derennes, Charles, 1882-1930
French
Okay, I just finished a book that left me with the strangest, most haunting feeling. It's called 'La petite faunesse' by Charles Derennes. Picture this: a young woman, raised in the wild by a faun, is brought back to 'civilized' Parisian society in the 1890s. Everyone sees her as a fascinating oddity, a living myth. But the real question the book asks is brutal and beautiful: What happens when you try to force a creature of the woods into a corset and a drawing room? Is she the savage one, or are we? It’s less about magic and more about the magic we lose. It’s a quiet, unsettling story about belonging, freedom, and the cages we build without even realizing it. If you like stories that make you look sideways at the world after you put them down, this is your next read.
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Charles Derennes’s 1909 novel, La petite faunesse, is a quiet gem from a forgotten corner of French literature. It doesn't roar with action; it whispers with a deep, persistent melancholy that sticks with you.

The Story

The plot is deceptively simple. In the forests of France, a hunter discovers a young woman living wild, seemingly raised by a faun—a mythical half-man, half-goat creature of the woods. Dubbed 'the little fauness,' she is captured and brought to Paris. There, she becomes the sensational project of a wealthy, intellectual family. They dress her, teach her French, and try to mold her into a proper young lady. The story follows her life in this gilded cage, observing high society with alien eyes. The central tension isn't about a grand escape, but a slow, internal suffocation. Can a soul shaped by wind and leaf ever truly live within stone walls and rigid social rules?

Why You Should Read It

This book got under my skin because it flips the script. We’re trained to see 'civilization' as the goal, the happy ending. Derennes makes you question that. Through the fauness’s silent observations and deep longing for the forest, Parisian life starts to look absurd, cruel, and oddly hollow. The characters around her are fascinating—some are genuinely kind but blind, others are selfish and treat her as a pet or an experiment. The fauness herself is not a magical being; she’s painfully human in her instincts and needs, which makes her predicament all the more heartbreaking. It’s a powerful, early take on the 'wild child' trope that focuses on psychological displacement rather than spectacle.

Final Verdict

La petite faunesse is perfect for readers who love character-driven, philosophical fiction. If you enjoyed the mood of novels like The Essex Serpent or the themes in stories about nature versus nurture, you’ll find a kindred spirit here. It’s not a fast-paced fantasy; it’s a slow, thoughtful, and ultimately tragic meditation on what we sacrifice for belonging, and the price of being told who you're supposed to be. A truly unique and haunting read.

Mark Lewis
1 year ago

Great read!

Margaret Martinez
9 months ago

Loved it.

Jennifer Clark
6 months ago

Five stars!

Kevin Flores
7 months ago

I was skeptical at first, but the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. I couldn't put it down.

Ava Nguyen
1 year ago

Great read!

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (5 User reviews )

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