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Season Outside the Frame is a literary mystery about art, obsession, authorship, and the stories people impose on women after they can no longer answer back.
The novel opens with the 1998 disappearance of Claire Dubois, a French painter last seen alone on the Seine. Her boat is found empty, no body is recovered, and the art world quickly turns her disappearance into a tidy story of alcohol, instability, and tragic female genius. Her exit becomes more famous than her work.
Decades later, Elise Moreau, a Sorbonne doctoral candidate, becomes consumed by Claire's paintings and by the suspicion that the accepted story is wrong. What begins as academic reconsideration turns into a personal and moral investigation. Elise wants to rescue Claire from the condescension of critics, dealers, lovers, and scholars who reduced her art to symptoms of breakdown.
The book moves between Elise's present-day unraveling and Claire's own past through her journal entries. Her "season outside the frame" in the south becomes a key image: a brief life beyond surveillance, commerce, and interpretation.
Elise's investigation also damages her own life. Her marriage to Marc, a chef under financial and emotional strain, deteriorates as Claire's story takes over Elise's attention. Christian Cardot, Claire's former lover and keeper of private materials, becomes both source and danger: a man whose devotion may also be possession. The deeper Elise reads, the more she sees that Christian's version of Claire is another frame, another attempt to own the meaning of her life.
At its core, this is not only a mystery about what happened to Claire Dubois. It is a novel about who gets to tell the story of an artist, what is lost when biography swallows work, and whether disappearance can be read not as collapse but as refusal. Claire's journals eventually complicate the myth: they suggest not a woman coming undone, but a woman choosing silence and an ending of her own making.