
Jeune provincial, le narrateur débarque à la capitale pour faire ses années de classe préparatoire. Il va découvrir une solitude nouvelle et un univers où la compétition est impitoyable. Un jour, un élève moins résistant que lui craque en plein cours, sort en insultant le prof et enjambe la balustrade. On retrouve dans "Un hiver à Paris" tout ce qui fait le charme des romans de Jean-Philippe Blondel: la complexité des relations; un effondrement, suivi d'une remontée mais à quel prix; l'attirance pour la mort et pour la vie; la confusion des sentiments ; le succès gagné sur un malentendu; le plaisir derrière la douleur; l'amertume derrière la joie. Sont présents les trois lieux qui guident la vie de l'auteur: Troyes, Paris, les Landes. Dans la lignée de "Et rester vivant", il y a chez le personnage-auteur-narrateur la même rage pure, la même sauvagerie - pour rester toujours debout sous des allures presque dilettantes.
Author

Jean-Philippe Blondel was born in Troyes, France, in 1964. His mother was a schoolteacher and his father worked for the National Railways. Jean-Philippe still lives in Troyes today after attending university in Paris and travelling around the world, including South and Central America, Nepal, India, and most of Europe. Writing has always been Jean-Philippe’s way of expressing himself. He started writing poems when he was seven, then moved on to short stories as a teen. He wrote his first novel when he was 19. One book that had a profound effect on him as a child was Alice in Wonderland: he tended to identify with the White Rabbit… Jean-Philippe’s favorite subjects at school were languages: French, English, and Spanish. He remembers telling his parents, at the age of 12, that he wanted to be an English teacher, which he’s been for the last 20 years in a high school. Since no one in his family was particularly interested in literature, Jean-Philippe often wonders how reading and writing took on so much importance in his life—and at such an early age. However, books became his life-support when, at the age of 17, he lost his mother and brother in a car crash, and his father in another crash four years later. His novels—for adults, young adults, or teenagers—are always based on everyday life. He writes in the first person because he wants readers to identify closely with the narrator, whom he tries to portray as the person next door. His novella, A Place to Live (2010), takes place in a high school. It is a very special text for him and reading it aloud always evokes strong emotions. He dedicated it to a class which he taught for three years: he had so enjoyed watching his students grow up and evolve that he wanted to offer them something special when they graduated. He read it to them during their last period together, and even now, several years later, thinking about the moment moves him deeply. Jean-Philippe writes with the earplugs of his MP3 player in. He carefully selects one song before writing, and it becomes the original soundtrack of the novel. He listens to it over and over, sometimes forgetting everything else, including where he is and what he’s doing there. It gives him the opportunity to live two lives at the same time—a fictitious one (because he so identifies with his narrators) and a real-life one. In the latter, he is married to a primary school teacher and has two daughters, aged 8 and 11. His favorite activities are teaching, writing, reading, and rock music. He is working on his eighth novel for adults, which also explores the boundaries between teenagers and “so-called” grown-ups.