When Gisèle Pelicot’s A Hymn to Life was published in February, it quickly became a literary phenomenon. Released simultaneously in 22 languages, it sold over 100,000 copies in France alone and topped bestseller lists in several European countries.
The deluge of interest was not only driven by the media debate that accompanied its publication, but also by the book’s power as a deeply human testimony of pain, resilience, and the capacity to reclaim life after a brutal experience of violence and betrayal.
For years, Pelicot’s husband, Dominique Pelicot, drugged his wife without her knowledge and allowed male strangers to rape her. This was not an isolated incident or a single crime, but a sustained pattern of abuse involving 72 men. Many of these assaults had been filmed and recorded. As the details emerged and the case came to court, a private tragedy became a public reckoning, shocking France and igniting a wider debate about sexual violence—and about a culture that can push victims towards shame instead of blaming the perpetrators.
The book is a deeply human reflection on trauma and the ability to reclaim one's life. Across its 256 pages, the author grapples with a central question: how can someone continue living after discovering that their life was a nightmare?
In the book’s opening pages, the author recalls her life before the shocking truth came to light, evoking years of ordinary routine: family life, children, settled social ties, and a way of living that, from the outside, appeared coherent and calm. She sets the scene to demonstrate how a seemingly ordinary life can be underwritten by calamity. Through this framing, the author poses a painful question about the nature of trust: how far can anyone truly know the people closest to them?

Turning point
The narrative reaches a crescendo with the discovery of the truth. Pelicot portrays it as an all-consuming shock that shook the very foundation of her life. The trust that underpinned the marriage was shattered in an instant, and shared memories that once seemed ordinary take on a different, deeply unsettling new meaning. The shock becomes a profound existential crisis, reshaping the author’s understanding of her past and her view of the world.
Yet she does not surrender to despair. Instead, the narrative gradually becomes a journey towards the possibility of recovery. Writing itself becomes a means of regaining control of her own story. After years of sexual abuse committed without her knowledge, she is able to speak in her own words and piece together events according to her own understanding.
The book offers a space for reflection on the nature of psychological trauma. Sexual violence doesn't end with the assault, or even with a court judgment; it leaves lasting effects on the psychological and social lives of victims. Pelicot recounts the difficulty of trusting others and of fears that surface in the smallest details of daily life, while also insisting that recovery is possible, even if it is a long and daunting path.
The book's title, at first, seems at odds with the experience the text recounts. But upon reflection, it can be taken to mean the capacity to go on living despite pain—a form of resistance.

Dignity and resilience
Pelicot expresses during media interviews that she never would have imagined her book would reach the level of success and attention it has garnered. But later realised that individual experience can resonate far more widely, as the questions raised in the book are universal.
Readers appreciate the story for its reflections on essential human themes such as trust, dignity, and resilience. Many have found in the testimony a voice that speaks to shared experiences and common fears across different societies, explaining its global appeal.
Pelicot also gained fame for turning her personal trauma into a public cause. During the trial, she insisted that the hearings be held in public, stressing that shame must fall on the perpetrators, not the victims. That stance has made her a symbol in the struggle against sexual violence and helped to strengthen debate about society’s responsibility to protect victims and hold abusers to account.