Cette nuit-là

Cette nuit-là

2025 • Mystery
After a violent argument, 15-year-old Sofia runs away from home. The next day, her parents and brother vanish without a trace. Over 20 years later, still haunted by unanswered questions about their disappearance overshadowed by 9/11.

Why you should read the novel

Jacques Expert’s novel, 'That Night,' offers readers far more than a simple crime story; it immerses you in the intricacies of psychological suspense and the enduring weight of past trauma. Through gripping, multi-perspective storytelling, the book compels you to interrogate your own assumptions about guilt, innocence, and memory. With its slow-burning tension and richly drawn characters, every chapter unfolds like a puzzle, rewarding careful reading and emotional investment. While the television series adapts the core plot, the novel delves much deeper into the characters’ internal lives. You’ll understand their motivations and inner conflicts in a way that only a novel’s prose can reveal, experiencing firsthand the chilling doubt and emotional fallout that haunt each witness. This intimacy creates a more nuanced and affecting narrative that the screen’s fast pace cannot replicate. Choosing to read 'That Night,' you gain access to Jacques Expert’s full literary craft: subtle foreshadowing, deft control of suspense, and the evocative atmosphere unique to the written word. If you’re seeking not just to follow a story, but to inhabit it—and to confront difficult truths alongside the characters—the novel is an irreplaceable experience.

Adaptation differences

One major difference between the adaptation and the novel is the treatment of narrative structure. While the book unfolds events through shifting first-person perspectives, allowing an intimate glimpse into each character’s psyche and suspicions, the TV series favors a more linear, externally-focused narrative. This change sacrifices much of the introspective tension and ambiguity that define the novel, leading to a more conventional mystery on screen. The series also amplifies certain events for dramatic effect and streamlines side characters who play pivotal roles in the novel. Instead of exploring a broad array of personalities and suspects, the show narrows its focus, increasing pace but reducing the depth of community impact portrayed by Expert. This results in a story that feels more streamlined but less immersive regarding the ripple effects of the crime. Another significant alteration is seen in character development. Key relationships and moral ambiguities are more subtly drawn in the novel, inviting readers to wrestle with shades of gray and unreliable memories. In contrast, the TV adaptation tends to emphasize clear motives and visually dramatic exchanges, occasionally oversimplifying the emotional complexity found in the source material. Finally, the resolution of the mystery in the TV series is presented with more definitive closure, catering to a desire for narrative tidiness. The novel, by contrast, leaves space for lingering questions and a sense of unresolved anguish, underlining the theme that some truths remain forever elusive. This crucial difference means that the book offers a more contemplative and unsettling experience than its visual counterpart.

Cette nuit-là inspired from

That Night
by Jacques Expert