A Hymn to Life by Gisele Pelicot, 246 pages
In 2020, as the world ground to a halt because of the pandemic, Gisele Pelicot's life similarly began to unravel as she discovered her husband had been drugging her, raping her, and inviting over 50 other men into their home to similarly abuse her. Despite the overwhelming sense of shame and turmoil, Pelicot opted to have an open trial to give courage and embolden other survivors.
This book was simultaneously an easy read and an extrodinairely difficult one. Easy because Pelicot's way of speaking and navigating her past, present, and future is honest, searching, and open. Difficult because of the subject matter. Sexual violence is inherently abhorrent, but it seems especially unfathomable when it comes from someone you thought you'd spent decades building a life with.
I can't imagine, even after reading this book, how much strength it must have taken for Gisele Pelicot to have withstood this tempestuous path, but as a woman, I am grateful she has let her story be heard loudly, publically, and without shame.


