- Published: 21 October 2025
- ISBN: 9781962770415
- Imprint: NY Review Books
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 224
- RRP: $35.00
Cécé
- Published: 21 October 2025
- ISBN: 9781962770415
- Imprint: NY Review Books
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 224
- RRP: $35.00
"Prophète’s achievement is to make the real and the virtual sides of Célia’s life equally vivid. This is a voice-driven novel, and Aidan Rooney’s terrific translation from the French conveys the heroine’s profound despair and snarky resilience. Célia is opinionated, vulnerable, mordantly funny and often overwhelmed . . . Status updates are her expressions of defiance and determination. For Célia, to post is to be." —Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"Cécé is a slim book, around 200 pages, small enough to fit in your coat pocket. Yet, it's a gripping story of how brutality can be commodified in our desensitised social-media age . . . 'There are women like Cécé here,' [Emmelie tells The Telegraph], 'audacious, full of desire to live and to change things. They give me hope. There is hope. There’s a reason I haven’t left all these years. Haiti inspires me. I owe a lot to this country.'” —Eleanor Halls, interview of Emmelie Prophète, The Telegraph
"The Cité of Divine Power is brought to life with skill. Its streets blaze and vibrate, its makeshift homes are shadowy with dismay . . . Cécé is a cool, cleareyed narrator, who takes pains not to sensationalize. Sometimes her restraint makes the reader feel impertinent for drawing conclusions at all. There is always the sense that Cécé could put it better herself . . . unsparing observation is characteristic of this brave novel—a book that marvels at people who feel entitled to their tears." —Susie Boyt, The New York Times
"Cécé is a modern take on an old story, survival by any means amid poverty and violence. Its portrait of both its central character and its setting is vivid and convincing . . . for [Cécé], existence itself is a victory." —Grant Rintoul, 1streading's Blog
"Cécé’s story is about resilience and adaptation . . . In many ways, Cécé reflects, the Cité is a microcosm of the world, with its brutal power structures, ruthlessness, and breakdown of the law . . . In the face of a reality that resembles “quicksand,” she advocates for a defiant solipsism . . . Aidan Rooney’s translation is lively and vibrant . . . brimming with visceral detail." —Benoit Landon, Words Without Borders
"Cécé is irresistible as the Boswell of the Cité and its residents: 'The unhinged (all too plentiful), the drunks, the junkies, people crippled by the last earthquake, the blind, the departed, the grieving.' Yet amid the district’s desperation, she reflects on how she 'couldn’t help thinking about the generosity that resisted the incredible violence, poverty and indifference.' Her arresting and lyrical chronicle amounts to an astonishing and deeply human story of resilience. It’s unforgettable." —Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Cécé, the narrator of this stark, unflinching novel from veteran novelist Prophète, opens her story nine months after the death of her grandmother. That event represents not just the loss of a loved one but the disruption of her entire social order: Her mother, an addict, died when she was 2, and her only remaining relative is an alcoholic uncle. That leaves her at the mercy of the gangs in her town . . . The novel can be read as a parable about the perils of influencer culture . . . But it’s most bracing as a portrait of the consequences of a young woman’s relentless abuse, in the tradition of Maggie: A Girl of the Streets or The Bluest Eye." — Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Cécé vividly depicts the slums of contemporary Haiti via a very online young sex worker who lives her best life on Facebook. A little gem of a book." —Zadie Smith, The Guardian
"Immersed in the atmosphere and people of a Haitian cité, Prophète’s titular protagonist attempts to claw a life for herself out of the hands of gangs, junkies, grandmothers, and preachers. With her morbid internet following on one side and the pressures of sex work on the other, Cécé is an imperfect and deeply human testament to female resiliency." —Sam L. Spratford, The Millions
"Cécé feels like the arrival of a bold new talent, and its heroine’s voice, amplified by Aidan Rooney’s sparkling translation, is fresh and full of passionate energy as it rips open a whole new view of Haiti’s tormented earth." —Madison Smartt Bell
"Emmelie Prophète creates an intricate, honest, and achingly beautiful rendering of Port-au-Prince from the point of view of a bright young woman archiving it all. With stunning prose, Prophète constructs a fully realized world with its terrors and its tenderest people. This is a gift of a book." —Leila Mottley
“This splendid writer's talent grabs us by the throat from the start, tightens the grip with each chapter, relaxes later on, then grips us again at the end, leaving us speechless.” —Dany Laferrière
“Emmelie Prophète renders the lives of others, particularly women, in tight prose and sharp narration.” —Yves Chemla, Le National
“A subtly thought-provoking novel of singular force . . . Prophète eschews easy answers, and Cécé stayed on my mind long after I closed the book.” —Victoria Mangan, Literary Review
"Prophète’s achievement is to make the real and the virtual sides of Célia’s life equally vivid. This is a voice-driven novel, and Aidan Rooney’s terrific translation from the French conveys the heroine’s profound despair and snarky resilience. Célia is opinionated, vulnerable, mordantly funny and often overwhelmed . . . Status updates are her expressions of defiance and determination. For Célia, to post is to be." —Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"Cécé is a slim book, around 200 pages, small enough to fit in your coat pocket. Yet, it's a gripping story of how brutality can be commodified in our desensitised social-media age . . . 'There are women like Cécé here,' [Emmelie tells The Telegraph], 'audacious, full of desire to live and to change things. They give me hope. There is hope. There’s a reason I haven’t left all these years. Haiti inspires me. I owe a lot to this country.'” —Eleanor Halls, interview of Emmelie Prophète, The Telegraph
"The Cité of Divine Power is brought to life with skill. Its streets blaze and vibrate, its makeshift homes are shadowy with dismay . . . Cécé is a cool, cleareyed narrator, who takes pains not to sensationalize. Sometimes her restraint makes the reader feel impertinent for drawing conclusions at all. There is always the sense that Cécé could put it better herself . . . unsparing observation is characteristic of this brave novel—a book that marvels at people who feel entitled to their tears." —Susie Boyt, The New York Times
"Cécé is a modern take on an old story, survival by any means amid poverty and violence. Its portrait of both its central character and its setting is vivid and convincing . . . for [Cécé], existence itself is a victory." —Grant Rintoul, 1streading's Blog
"Cécé’s story is about resilience and adaptation . . . In many ways, Cécé reflects, the Cité is a microcosm of the world, with its brutal power structures, ruthlessness, and breakdown of the law . . . In the face of a reality that resembles “quicksand,” she advocates for a defiant solipsism . . . Aidan Rooney’s translation is lively and vibrant . . . brimming with visceral detail." —Benoit Landon, Words Without Borders
"Cécé is irresistible as the Boswell of the Cité and its residents: 'The unhinged (all too plentiful), the drunks, the junkies, people crippled by the last earthquake, the blind, the departed, the grieving.' Yet amid the district’s desperation, she reflects on how she 'couldn’t help thinking about the generosity that resisted the incredible violence, poverty and indifference.' Her arresting and lyrical chronicle amounts to an astonishing and deeply human story of resilience. It’s unforgettable." —Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Cécé, the narrator of this stark, unflinching novel from veteran novelist Prophète, opens her story nine months after the death of her grandmother. That event represents not just the loss of a loved one but the disruption of her entire social order: Her mother, an addict, died when she was 2, and her only remaining relative is an alcoholic uncle. That leaves her at the mercy of the gangs in her town . . . The novel can be read as a parable about the perils of influencer culture . . . But it’s most bracing as a portrait of the consequences of a young woman’s relentless abuse, in the tradition of Maggie: A Girl of the Streets or The Bluest Eye." — Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Cécé vividly depicts the slums of contemporary Haiti via a very online young sex worker who lives her best life on Facebook. A little gem of a book." —Zadie Smith, The Guardian
"Immersed in the atmosphere and people of a Haitian cité, Prophète’s titular protagonist attempts to claw a life for herself out of the hands of gangs, junkies, grandmothers, and preachers. With her morbid internet following on one side and the pressures of sex work on the other, Cécé is an imperfect and deeply human testament to female resiliency." —Sam L. Spratford, The Millions
"Cécé feels like the arrival of a bold new talent, and its heroine’s voice, amplified by Aidan Rooney’s sparkling translation, is fresh and full of passionate energy as it rips open a whole new view of Haiti’s tormented earth." —Madison Smartt Bell
"Emmelie Prophète creates an intricate, honest, and achingly beautiful rendering of Port-au-Prince from the point of view of a bright young woman archiving it all. With stunning prose, Prophète constructs a fully realized world with its terrors and its tenderest people. This is a gift of a book." —Leila Mottley
“This splendid writer's talent grabs us by the throat from the start, tightens the grip with each chapter, relaxes later on, then grips us again at the end, leaving us speechless.” —Dany Laferrière
“Emmelie Prophète renders the lives of others, particularly women, in tight prose and sharp narration.” —Yves Chemla, Le National