Praise for Standing Heavy
"This shrewd, episodic novel stars the security guards of Paris ... undocumented Ivoirian immigrants whose watchful eyes examine Parisian turmoil over two generations."
—New York Times
“This book is about the anti-flâneurs: not the rich white men who roam the boulevards of Paris but poorly paid Black men whose jobs require them to stand still. As a security guard, the protagonist of Standing Heavy is invisible but sees everything. Told in a fragmentary style—as if from different camera angles—this is the story of colonialism and consumerism, of the specifics of power, and of the hope of the sixties diminishing as society turns cynical and corrupt.”
—International Booker Prize Judges’ citation
"A spry volume of 167 pages ... that manages to trade heavily in politics while also sneaking up on your sympathy. I won’t spoil the end, but it startled me in its poignancy."
—The Walrus
"Tightly written and tautly structured, Standing Heavy has a considerable heft to it ... There have been countless novels written about class and immigration over the years, but what GauZ’ has done here is truly singular."
—Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders
“Inventive and very funny.”
—John Self, The Guardian
“This compact, humane satire, deftly translated by Frank Wynne, entertains as much as it informs.”
—Lucy Popescu, Financial Times
“A cunning observer and a disenchanted protestor, Gauz’ makes shopping an ethnological mine, a priceless sketch and a combat sport.”
—Elle
"Standing Heavy (in translation by Frank Wynne) reads quickly, even though it’s rich and complex. I’d intended to read just a couple of chapters, but I spent a snowy afternoon reading the whole book until it was finished ... the style is vivid, the dialogue taut, and the presentation is clever."
—Buried in Print
"An incisive ... meaningful document chronicling the humanity of undocumented workers."
—Kirkus Reviews
"This combines some of my favorite things, a solid one-sit-read, an elegant translation, and an author willing to play with form ... A book I felt satisfied after reading once and yet left me ready to dig in again."
—Publisher's Weekly
“Gauz casts a tender, yet lucid gaze on the African community. By devoting a book to the shadowy men of security, Gauz finally gives voice and life to those who, oddly enough, are invisible.”
—Le Matricule des Anges
“A funny and poignant intergenerational tale of three Ivoirian men newly arrived in Paris. And a sharp social and political commentary, delivered via the sharp eyes of the black security guards that white Paris relies on to keep itself safe.”
—Tiffany Tsao, author of The Majesties