Margins
Le Secret book cover
Le Secret
2001
First Published
3.67
Average Rating
157
Number of Pages

notez « Emilie fut la seule à remarquer que son fils avait dans le regard quelque chose de nouveau, d'indéchiffrable, une lumière impalpable qui lui rappelait ce bonheur intérieur qu'elle-même ressentait lorsqu'elle allait visiter son propre secret. Elle sut que Pierre taisait l'essentiel, mais elle resta silencieuse. » Que s'est-il donc passé dans la vieille vigne abandonnée où l'on a retrouvé Pierre Morin inanimé après deux jours d'absence ? Dans le village, tous s'interrogent, se passionnent, et cherchent à percer à tout prix son secret. Avec ce récit captivant d'un genre tout à fait nouveau, aux frontières du conte philosophique et du roman à suspense, Frédéric Lenoir nous offre une parabole sur les choix et les valeurs essentielles de notre existence.

Avg Rating
3.67
Number of Ratings
192
5 STARS
22%
4 STARS
33%
3 STARS
34%
2 STARS
8%
1 STARS
2%
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Author

Frédéric Lenoir
Frédéric Lenoir
Author · 31 books

3 June 1962. Birth in Madagascar.

  1. His parents return to France and move to the country to raise their four children, born in Morocco and Madagascar. 1970-1979. He moves to Paris. An unruly student, he is particularly ill-disposed to doing schoolwork and is sent to three different lycées (Victor Duruy, Buffon, Camille Sée). As a teenager he reads Hesse and Dostoyevsky, kindling his interest in existential questions. At 15 he develops a passion for philosophy after reading Plato’s Dialogues, and in astrology from reading books by André Barbault. 1980-1985. The Swiss psychologist Carl Gustav Jung has a profound effect on his intellectual direction, triggering a desire to study mankind’s great myths and religions. After an early fascination with Asian spirituality, in particular Tibetan Buddhism, discovered through the work of Chogyam Trungpa, he develops an interest in the Kabbalah and begins taking classes in the symbolism of Hebrew letters. He has no particular interest in studying Christianity, however. His Catholic upbringing, although very liberal, had focused too much on dogma and morality. Then, at 19, he reads the Gospels for the first time, and is amazed by them. He begins studying philosophy at the University of Fribourg, in Switzerland, with his childhood friend Emmanuel Rouvillois, who later becomes a monk by the name of Brother Samuel; there, he meets two crucial and outstanding professors: the Dominican philosopher Marie-Dominique Philippe (with whom he writes a book of interviews, Les trois sagesses, in 1994) and the philosopher and Talmud scholar Emmanuel Lévinas who, as a testament, leaves him a fine text on ethics in his book Le Temps de la responsabilité (1991). Parallel to his philosophy studies, he goes on a personal spiritual quest that leads him to spend several months in Israel and India, as well as in Christian hermitages and monasteries in France.
  2. As editor of the religion department at Editions Fayard, he publishes several books examining philosophical and spiritual themes.
  3. He resigns from his position as editor to devote more time to academic research and writing, and begins work on a doctoral thesis on Buddhism in the West at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales.
  4. Passionate about ecological issues, he helps found the association ‘‘Environnement sans frontières.’’ In 2003 he publishes a book of interviews with his friend Hubert Reeves, who sounds the alarm on the risks threatening the planet. (Mal de Terre).
  5. He is appointed associate researcher at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). Following in the footsteps of Edgar Morin, one of his intellectual mentors, he takes on the issue of religion in a multi-disciplinary approach combining philosophy, sociology and history.
  6. He writes l’Encyclopédie des religions, conceived and compiled with Ysé Tardan-Masquelier, (2500 pages, 2 volumes, 150 collaborators). 1996-2000. He writes for L’Express on a regular basis.
  7. He writes and directs an international study about sects for television with Lolande Cadrin-Rossignol. The documentary series, entitled ‘‘Sectes, mensonges et idéaux’’ (‘‘Sects, Lies and Ideals’’), is broadcast in France on the Cinquième channel and in numerous other countries. He also co-writes a documentary about the Dalai Lama that is broadcast on Canal +, and a series of three 52’ episodes on the Cinquième channel entitled ‘‘Dieu a changé d’adresse’’ (‘’God has changed his address’’). 1998-2005. He writes a number of books − some alone, others with Catherine David and Jean-Philippe de Tonnac − of interviews with such diverse figures as Abbé Pierre, Umberto Eco, Stephen Jay Gould, Jean Vanier, Hubert Reeves and Jean-Claude Carrière.
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