Blandine le Callet, whose novel The Ballad of Lila K competed for the 1st prize of the digital book, tells what pushed her to write her book.How did you get the idea of this book and in what state of mind do you have it written?At halfway between the novel of anticipation and initiation, Blandine Le Callet changes registry with the Ballad of Lila K.The Ballad of Lila K me was inspired by a fact of the 1980s: the discovery of a small boy who lived locked up in a closet. Years later, I read in the press the testimony of this martyr child, which was rebuilt and spoke of his experience with clarity, while expressing an immense love for his mother. This love surviving abuse seemed both beautiful and unthinkable, and it is this mystery which served as a starting point to the novel. In the Ballad of Lila K, I wanted to tell the chaotic reconstruction of a broken child, and the investigation to find her mother in which she remains attached by a bond of love. But I realized pretty quickly that this novel might turn to the sociological evidence of child abuse, what I wanted at all costs to avoid. So I decided to place the action in a slightly futuristic world, projecting trends that seem to draw in our contemporary society. I "recovered" a fiction universe I had put in place for another project, started there nearly fifteen years and remained unfinished. This allowed me to enrich the personal story of Lila from a political background, addressing themes that keep me in heart. L'écriture de La Ballade de Lila K n'a pas été simple: j'avais conscience de m'atteler à un projet ambitieux et je me suis demandé jusqu'à la fin si j'arriverais à le mener à bien. J'avais aussi conscience de prendre le risque de déconcerter mon éditeur et mes lecteurs, en écrivant un roman très différent du premier, Une pièce montée. À cela s'est ajoutée la difficulté inhérente à l'écriture, les doutes constants sur la qualité de mon travail, les moments de profond découragement... J'ai failli plusieurs fois abandonner ; mais comme Lila, je suis tenace, et à l'arrivée, j'éprouve une grande fierté d'avoir terminé ce roman. Comment avez-vous perçu les chroniques de nos jurés à l'égard de votre livre?Je ne sais pas si j'ai lu toutes les chroniques concernant mon livre, mais celles dont j'ai pris connaissance m'ont toujours semblé portées par un véritable respect de l'oeuvre, même lorsqu'elles étaient réservées. Dans la plupart des chroniques, j'ai apprécié l'alliance d'une subjectivité assumée - les jurés expriment ce qu'ils ont ressenti à la lecture du livre - et d'un véritable souci d'analyse et d'argumentation. Comme souvent lorsque je lis une critique (positive ou négative) de mon livre, cela m'a donné envie d'en rencontrer les auteurs pour en discuter avec eux. En tant qu'auteur, que vous inspire le livre numérique?It's been years that I work with the books in digital form, as part of my profession (apart from my writer activity, I'm teacher-researcher at the University), and I was able to measure the benefits of digitization. It provides access to rare or fragile texts that it would be almost impossible to see through the 'traditional' channels; It also allows to discover texts, because vagrancy of one work to another is quick and easy. For me, this represents a considerable intellectual gain, but also saving time and money. As an author, I believe that the digital book will enable the invention of new forms of literature: the mixed forms, integrating film footage, illustrations or music; Digital will facilitate forms of narrative "Star", offering a choice between several versions of the story. I am sure that authors such as Perec or Queneau would have been passionate about the emergence of this new "tool" on the literary scene. However, my enthusiasm is not devoid of concern at the rise of censorship, and a tendency to the revision of works. In an edition of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain recently published, the word "nigger" and was replaced by the word "slave". I find scandalous this rewrite on behalf of principles without doubt very respectable but which, in my opinion, there are dangerous as stupid application. What worries me with digital, it is that it makes the implementation of this type of censorship technically very easy, and invisible. It is one of the themes of the Ballad of Lila K: as part of his work at the Grande Bibliothèque, Lila spends her time to digitize works and articles, while performing cuts and changes according to the guidelines of its hierarchy. Therefore real enthusiasm, but caution. I believe that it is important to not just the facilities that we offer access to works in a dematerialized form. Digital technology is a step forward, but do not forget that we do actually have the text when we hold in its paper form.
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