For me, Serotonin was an extraordinary introduction to the work of one of France's most controversial contemporary writers. Not only is Michel Houellebecq contemporary, he is also virtually my contemporary (he is a year younger). Is that why we seem to have similar mindsets?
Houellebecq's protagonist, Florent, is solitary, reclusive and taking anti-depressants. Yes, sounds familiar to me. He is forty-six and undergoing a midlife crisis. I was forty-seven when I had mine. He is a successful bureaucrat with the European Agriculture Agency. I was a successful local bureaucrat. He hates the free market economy. Yup.
His lovelife is complex and not very successful. His Japanese girlfriend is extremely liberated sexually, but Florent hankers after Camille, who he now realises was The One. Not that he will be much use to her. His anti-depressant, Captorix, is now the most important thing in his life, and it has rendered him impotent. (Captorix is fictional, but Houellebecq has done his research on anti-d's.)
Anyway, Florent resolves to quit his job and withdraw from life. He sells his apartment in Paris, dumps his girlfriend, quits his job and moves into a hotel in a different part of the city. He goes for a walk every day, eats out, but otherwise stays in his room, watching TV and reflecting on his past.
After a couple of months he decides to explore his past, revisit the key places and, if possible, contact those who matter. He has a brief affair with one old girlfriend, which doesn't work. He moves on to Normandy where he meets up with his college friend Aymeric, who lives in the family chateau and tries hard to make a living by farming in the traditional way. Florent ends up living on the estate, where Aymeric teaches him how to shoot. While Florent vegetates, Aymeric's life and business collapse. He becomes involved with the yellow vest movement, with consequences. Florent witnesses all this, wondering if he should get involved. In the end he moves on, and tracks down Camille...
Serotonin is a complex and troubling read. You don't always know where or when you are as you read, which is absolutely intentional. Houellebecq favours short, punchy passages in short chapters. I was fascinated, and whilst reading Serotonin, which was written in 2019, the year Houellebecq won his Legion d'Honneur and seems to be his most recent book to appear in English, I bought and read his first book, a non-fiction study of H P Lovecraft's writing from 1989 - and the style and attitudes are absolutely the same.
His opinions are not necessarily mine. Some I found offensive (but then I have had years of therapy as well as years of anti-depressants). Nevertheless I am absolutely hooked on Houellebecq.








