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Book Cover for: The Mystery Guest: A True Story, Grégoire Bouillier

The Mystery Guest: A True Story

Grégoire Bouillier

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A "frank and wry, mad and graceful" true story about getting dumped, and getting over it. (Slate, Best Books of the Year)


When the phone rang on a cold November afternoon in 1990, Grégoire Bouillier had no way of knowing that the caller was the woman who had left him, without warning, five years before. And he couldn't have guessed why she was calling: not to say she was sorry, not to explain why she'd vanished from his life, but to invite him to a party. A birthday party. For a woman he'd never met.


Here is the unlikely but true account of how one man got over a poken heart, regained his faith in literature, participated--by mistake--in a work of performance art, threw away his turtlenecks, spent his rent money on a 1964 bordeaux that nobody ever drank, and fell in love again. Named one of the year's best books by Slate and the San Francisco Chronicle when it first appeared in English, The Mystery Guest is a "sad, funny and vivid" memoir that "gives shape to the painful yet somehow hilarious disjunction that is the residue of a shattered love affair." (--Erica Wagner, The New York Times Book Review).

Book Details

  • Publisher: McNally Editions
  • Publish Date: May 21st, 2024
  • Pages: 112
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.40in - 5.00in - 0.50in - 0.30lb
  • EAN: 9781961341050
  • Categories: MemoirsLiterary FiguresArtists, Architects, Photographers

About the Author

Truman, Ben: -

Ben Truman was born in London. He currently divides his time between New York and Bruges.


Bouillier, Grégoire: -

Grégoire Bouillier was born in Tizi Ouzou, Algeria, and raised in Paris. A former editor of the magazine Science et Vie, he is the author of four works of autobiography, including Report on Myself and Le Dossier M. Having worked as a painter and journalist, he published his first memoir, The Mystery Guest, when he was forty years old.

Praise for this book

"Sad, funny and vivid . . . As The Mystery Guest beautifully shows . . . even when the story seems to have spun out of our control (your lover leaves you, you lose your job, you are surrounded by intimations of mortality and loss) the power to reclaim it lies within your grasp."

--Erica Wagner "New York Times Book Review"

"Existential angst has rarely been as humorous or as heartbreaking."

-- "People"

"This perfect little book [is] a message to extraterrestrial intelligence that says: we are human, heartbroken, grim and funny in our despair, yet hopeful and miracle-prone."--John Hodgman
"Proust in a bottle . . . Read it . . . Pick it up again. Be startled." -- "GQ"
"I woke up the other morning and started to read this marvelous book. I stayed in bed until I had read the last page. I could not for the life of me think of anything in the world I wanted to do but read this book. I am tempted to stay in bed until Grégoire Bouillier writes another one."--
"The year's most charming oddity . . . Frank and wry, mad and graceful, Bouillier riffs on his convictions, delusions, and stray theories in [this] French pastry, performing a kind of slapstick philosophy that sheds some light on his soul."--Troy Patterson "Slate, Best Books of 2006"
"A refreshingly odd voice . . . With its restless intelligence, The Mystery Guest manages to encompass all the thematic preoccupations of its touchstone, Mrs. Dalloway: time, fate, and the meaning of life. And unlike Ms. Woolf, Bouillier keeps us laughing . . . Bouillier's prose . . . turns every interaction between the narrator and his fellow guests into a comic meditation on the impossibility of communication . . . And then suddenly, in a stunning reversal, Bouillier sets off the depth charges he's quietly been planting throughout the book. In the end, we discover that The Mystery Guest isn't a symphony of missed connections after all, but a kind of hymn to possibility . . . It leaves us moved, even as we shake our heads in disbelief . . . The Mystery Guest [leaves] the reader in a state of grateful intoxication."--Garth Risk Hallberg "The Millions"
"An editor friend once told me that he thought that literature was 'gossip about human nature, ' and in The Mystery Guest, I find precisely that: excellent gossip . . . and excellent literature. I love the book: it is sharp and witty, swift and compelling, it paints its exclusive world so vividly, and it so precisely captures the circling monologue which so many of us experience as our inner life."--Sheila Heti, from the Afterword