Therese Raquin is a novel by Emile Zola that was first published in 1867. The novel tells the story of Therese, a young woman who is trapped in a loveless and unhappy marriage to her sickly cousin, Camille Raquin.
Therese and Camille live in Paris with Therese's aunt, Madame Raquin, who runs a small shop. Therese is bored and unhappy in her marriage, and she longs for excitement and passion. One day, she meets Laurent, a handsome artist who is a regular at the shop. Therese and Laurent are immediately attracted to each other, and they begin an affair.
As the affair continues, Therese and Laurent become more and more obsessed with each other. They decide to kill Camille in order to be together, and they carry out the murder in a fit of passion. However, the guilt of their crime weighs heavily on them, and they are haunted by the memory of Camille's death.
As the novel progresses, Therese and Laurent's relationship becomes strained and volatile. They are constantly at odds with each other, and Therese begins to regret the murder and the choices she has made. Eventually, the guilt and the strain of living with the secret of the murder drive Therese to madness, and she drowns herself in the Seine River.
Therese Raquin is a poignant and powerful story of love, guilt, and the destructive power of obsession. It is a haunting tale that explores the dark depths of human desire and the consequences of giving into temptation.
In Secret (2013)
The owners of the restaurant let her lie in bed while Laurent goes back to Paris to break the news. Madame Raquin has always doted on her only offspring, sickly Camille Raquin, who in turn has always had a sense of entitlement in he having everything handed to him by her. However, this plot fits very specifically to his intentions. On an outing they go boating and Laurent drowns Camille. Sometimes they think about Camille, but for the most part they focus on their daily lives.
They were meeting in the mornings, and that lasted as long as Laurent could escape his office. Laurent went to see Camille's corpse at the morgue and that image keeps on haunting him, causing him nightmares. Paris: Livre de Poche, 1997. The second is the date of publication online or last modification online. The corpse of Camille seems to come between them.