Thomas Legrand's post
Article reserved for subscribers
Memories of Bernard Maris, morning companion passionate about Maurice Genevoix, desacralizing and cunning economist, on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of January 7.
To not miss any Thomas Legrand posts, subscribe to the newsletters from our political columnists.
To us dead,
I think back to Bernard Maris, the economist who knew how to put lively content around the dry economic figures and desecrate growth. “If I come to the radio by car, it's good for growth because I have to buy gas… But if I have an accident on the way, it will be even better for growth because you will have to buy a car, so “Long live accidents!” Bernard had another passion which he talked to me about at each of our lunches: Maurice Genevoix. I listened absently to what seemed to me to be a somewhat outdated whim from a fan of the author of the tricked dictations of our childhood. But I let myself be won over by his Toulouse style and I, too, ended up advocating the pantheonization of the Great War novelist. The monstrosities of 14-18 which fascinated Bernard have caught up with him. The attacks and the jihadist madness are also (historians say) distant repercussions of the