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Nous préparons tout. Cela ne prendra pas longtemps.
Nous préparons tout. Cela ne prendra pas longtemps.
Une sélection de titres Fiction qui révèlent le style, le rythme et la voix que les lecteurs aiment.
de Arthur C. Clarke
Write science fiction that feels inevitable, not “cool”: steal 2001’s engine for building awe, dread, and meaning with controlled mystery and escalating consequence.
de Roberto Bolaño
Write a novel that feels infinite without wandering: steal 2666’s engine for building obsession, escalation, and meaning out of seemingly unrelated lives.
de Anthony Burgess
Write a narrator readers can’t shake off by learning Burgess’s real trick: how to weaponize voice so it pulls plot, theme, and pace in one grip.
de Henrik Ibsen
Write scenes that trap your characters in polite conversation until the truth has nowhere left to hide—learn Ibsen’s pressure-cooker structure from A Doll's House.
de Ernest Hemingway
Write leaner scenes that still break hearts by mastering Hemingway’s real trick in A Farewell to Arms: escalating stakes through understatement and consequence.
de Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o
Write twisty, morally serious fiction without cheap shocks by mastering Ngũgĩ’s engine: suspense built from communal secrets and delayed confession.
de E. M. Forster
Write tension that survives politics, romance, and philosophy: master Forster’s “misunderstanding engine” that turns a polite invitation into a story you can’t smooth over.
de Kenzaburō Ōe
Write braver moral drama by mastering Ōe’s engine: how to trap a protagonist between public decency and private panic—and make every scene force a choice.
de James Joyce
Write scenes that mature as your character matures—steal Joyce’s “evolving voice” engine so your prose grows teeth instead of just getting longer.
de Charles Dickens
Write scenes that feel inevitable, not convenient—steal Dickens’s pressure-cooker structure: doubled lives, escalating stakes, and a sacrifice that actually earns your ending.
de Ursula K. Le Guin
Write tighter fantasy with real weight by mastering Le Guin’s hidden engine: how a single moral mistake becomes a plot, a theme, and a character arc.
de Mark Twain
Write scenes that feel inevitable without feeling planned by mastering Twain’s real trick: a voice-driven moral engine that escalates trouble on purpose.
de Lewis Carroll
Write scenes that feel wildly unpredictable yet inevitable by mastering Carroll’s real trick: consequence-driven nonsense with a ticking social threat.
de Erich Maria Remarque
Write war stories that hit the gut, not the clichés—steal Remarque’s engine for turning ordinary moments into irreversible loss.
de Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Write a novel that argues with itself and still wins the reader over—learn Americanah’s engine for voice-driven stakes and scene-to-idea momentum.
de Agatha Christie
Write a mystery that tightens like a noose—learn Christie’s “closed system” engine (fair clues, shrinking options, rising paranoia) and stop losing readers in chapter three.
de George Orwell
Write a fable that hits like a political thriller by mastering Orwell’s real trick: escalating betrayal through simple language and ruthless logic.
de Leo Tolstoy
Write characters who feel painfully alive by learning Tolstoy’s real trick: how to collide private desire with public consequence until the story has no safe exit.
de William Faulkner
Write a story that survives twelve voices and still hits like a hammer—learn Faulkner’s engine for obsession, compression, and escalating consequence.
de Toni Morrison
Write scenes that haunt the reader on purpose—learn Morrison’s engine for turning trauma into plot pressure (without preaching or melodrama).
de Cormac McCarthy
Write scenes that feel inevitable instead of explained: learn Blood Meridian’s engine—moral pressure, ritual escalation, and uncompromising voice—so your violence, stakes, and meaning actually land.
de Aldous Huxley
Write dystopia that bites instead of lectures—you’ll see how Brave New World builds conflict by trapping characters inside a “perfect” system that solves desire and kills meaning.
de Thomas Mann
Write family saga that actually grips: learn Mann’s slow-burn conflict engine—how to turn “decline” into escalating pressure, scene by scene.
de Voltaire
Write satire that actually lands by learning Candide’s core engine: how to use relentless reversals to force a character (and reader) to outgrow a belief.
de Ian Fleming
Write a thriller that feels inevitable, not noisy—steal Casino Royale’s engine: moral pressure that turns every scene into a test.
de Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Write moral suspense that actually hurts: steal Crime and Punishment’s engine for turning an idea into a cage you can’t narrate your way out of.
de Philip K. Dick
Write moral tension that actually bites by mastering Philip K. Dick’s trick: turning a detective plot into a stress test for the soul.
de Boris Pasternak
Write bigger novels without melodrama: steal Doctor Zhivago’s core engine—how private desire collides with public history—and make readers feel both.
de Miguel de Cervantes
Write stories that argue with themselves and still feel inevitable—learn Cervantes’ “double-reality” engine that makes Don Quixote unforgettable.
de Bram Stoker
Write tension that feels inevitable, not noisy—steal Dracula’s engine: how to weaponize documents, delays, and viewpoint gaps so dread keeps compounding.
de Cao Xueqin
Write a novel that feels alive for 100+ chapters by mastering Cao Xueqin’s real trick: turning a household into a fate-machine that grinds characters into meaning.
de Frank Herbert
Write stories that feel inevitable instead of impressive by learning Dune’s real engine: how Herbert turns ecology, politics, and prophecy into one escalating trap.
de Theodor Fontane
Write quieter scenes that hit harder: learn Fontane’s pressure-cooker trick in Effi Briest—how social “politeness” becomes a plot engine you can reuse.
de Ivan Turgenev
Write arguments that feel like life-or-death without car chases: learn the “ideology-as-plot” engine that makes Fathers and Sons hit so hard.
de Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Write stories that argue with the reader’s soul and still feel inevitable—steal Faust’s core engine: a contract plot that turns desire into structure.
de Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Write ambitious stories that don’t collapse under their own ideas—learn Goethe’s modular plot engine and how to make theme generate scenes (not speeches).
de Jorge Luis Borges
Write stories that feel bigger than their word count by mastering Borges’s core engine: the “idea that fights back” and forces a character to pay for curiosity.
de Ernest Hemingway
Write a war novel that hits like a love story: learn Hemingway’s “deadline + intimacy” engine that forces every scene to matter.
de Isaac Asimov
Write smarter epic fiction without drowning in lore—steal Foundation’s real trick: how to build plot from inevitability, not explosions.
de Mary Shelley
Write stories that haunt readers for the right reasons—master moral stakes and layered narration by reverse-engineering Frankenstein’s engine (not its “monster”).
de James Baldwin
Write scenes that feel like a courtroom and a confession at once—learn Baldwin’s pressure-cooker structure: how to trap a character between faith, family, and self until they crack (and change).
de Charles Dickens
Write stories that feel “inevitable,” not lucky—steal Dickens’s engine for turning shame, desire, and misbelief into plot momentum.
de Jonathan Swift
Write satire that actually bites: learn Swift’s “credible narrator + escalating worlds” engine so your story stays funny, sharp, and structurally inevitable.
de Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Write a novel that hurts in the right places: learn Adichie’s engine for turning private desire into public catastrophe—without preaching or losing plot.
de William Shakespeare
Write scenes that trap your hero in a choice they can’t dodge—learn Hamlet’s engine: how to turn doubt into escalating action.
de Joseph Conrad
Write stories that feel like a slow fuse, not a quick plot: learn Conrad’s “frame + descent” engine that turns ambiguity into pressure.
de Yaa Gyasi
Write a novel that spans generations without feeling like a history lecture—steal Homegoing’s chain-link structure and its pressure-cooker stakes.
de Max Frisch
Write a smarter tragedy: learn how Homo Faber turns a “rational” narrator into his own trap—using voice, irony, and delayed revelation you can steal.
de Julio Cortázar
Write braver fiction that still feels inevitable: learn Hopscotch’s engine for controlled chaos—modular structure, desire-as-plot, and reader-as-coauthor discipline.
de E. M. Forster
Write class conflict that actually hurts: learn Forster’s “connection engine” so every polite scene carries a loaded gun.
de Italo Calvino
Write scenes that hook smarter readers by mastering Calvino’s engine: desire interrupted, restarted, and made irresistible.
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