Marie, an art restorer at the Cluny Museum, spends her days breathing new life into a 15th-century painting depicting Mary Magdalene. But whilst her expert hands can erase the ravages of time from wood and gold, she has no idea how to mend her own life. Consumed by guilt at having destroyed her marriage through infidelity, one day she pushes open the door of a temporary chapel, near Notre-Dame Cathedral, still scarred by the flames. She is not seeking religious absolution, but simply a place to lay down the burden of her guilt.
Behind the confessional grille stands Matthieu Savon, a Jesuit priest and former philosophy lecturer. Accustomed to listening to human failings with the detachment required by his vocation, he is suddenly unsettled by the brutal frankness and vulnerability of this faceless woman. Over the weeks, what was meant to be an anonymous sacrament turns into a vital rendezvous. An intimate dialogue, woven first from words whispered in the dim light, then from feverish anticipation and eloquent silences.
Whilst Marie scrapes away the old layers of varnish to reveal the light of a saint, Matthieu sees his own certainties waver, confronted by a temptation that calls into question the very essence of his vows. How close can one get to the edge before falling?
The Confessional is a novel of infinite grace about the cracks in the soul. In it, Isabelle Richard delicately explores the fine line between the sacred and the forbidden, reminding us that love, just like the restoration of a work of art, does not consist of erasing wounds, but of learning to live with their golden scars.
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