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A Wealthy French Family and Generations of Heartache
A Wealthy French Family and Generations of Heartache

New York Times

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

A Wealthy French Family and Generations of Heartache

MISERY OF LOVE, by Yvan Alagbé; translated by Donald Nicholson-Smith Every death is as singular as a fingerprint. We can see broad patterns in the ways they come about, and affect those of us left behind — the familiar whorls, loops and deltas of race, nationality, family, religion — but each one forms a unique picture of an absence. Or, in the case of the French cartoonist Yvan Alagbé's graphic novel 'Misery of Love,' a series of pictures. The book has a death as its catalyst: The patriarch and matriarch of the wealthy Genet family have died, and as their granddaughter Claire attends their joint funeral, she remembers having been cast out years earlier by her father, Michel, for the crime of dating Alain, an undocumented Black immigrant. We read the story from the perspectives of Claire, Michel and Alain, and their recollections fill in narrative gaps for us, but not for one another. With its interlaced, out-of-joint chronologies, 'Misery of Love' is as much about the problem of living with our own choices as it is about the legacies we leave our children and grandchildren. The characters rarely consist of more than a few brushstrokes and snatches of dialogue (translated by Donald Nicholson-Smith), but 'Misery of Love' is both concise and shockingly lush. Alagbé loves images of bodies colliding — in sex, in birth, in violence. Even as Claire takes a solitary walk in the woods, she isn't alone: Her progress is interrupted by visions of Alain there with her, embracing her among the trees. Conversations about sins present and past rarely begin or end, threading through the agonizingly long Catholic funeral. Alagbé has set himself an impossibly high technical bar and then vaulted over it: Each page is two ink-wash panels, the majority of them without text, but somehow the characters emerge from his shades of gray with astonishing vibrancy. A single page shows Claire and Alain in bed together, opposite a scene in which Claire tells Alain about her childhood home as they walk down the street where she used to live. In the panel below, we see a young Claire standing at the bottom of a flight of stairs. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Crafting A Family Legacy: A Financial Plan That Protects What Matters
Crafting A Family Legacy: A Financial Plan That Protects What Matters

Forbes

time18-07-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

Crafting A Family Legacy: A Financial Plan That Protects What Matters

If you want a blueprint for creating a family legacy, you must take a different route. Start by asking yourself one question: Why? Two couples walk into my office. Both are wearing the same brands of clothing, and are comparably dressed. Each pairing has roughly the same age, race, and educational background; from all appearances, you could guess they were clones of each other. And yet, when they each sit down to talk to me about financial planning, their situations could be miles apart. Anyone can come up with a basic financial plan that works for a family just by following common sense. But if you want something different—a blueprint for creating a legacy—you must take a different route. Start by asking yourself one question: Why? Those couples who hypothetically walked into my office may look the same, but their financial backgrounds and experiences can also be vastly different. This means their reasons for seeing me can be just as unique. So while I can give you a financial plan that explains how your future can be what you envision, the more important question I need answered is why. When you know why you want financial planning help, you can determine how to create that blueprint. Your reasons are going to be unique to you and your family. It could be about building generational wealth for your descendants so they can have financial freedom, or for ensuring your kids have a head start on their future, but your wealth does not fully subsidize it. Asking yourself why is a huge part of the process. The other part comes down to a topic I discuss extensively in my book, Values Over Valuables. What Are Your Values? Think for a moment about what having a legacy means to you. The word itself in its noun form is defined in a few different ways, but only two apply here: With the first definition, yes, your legacy is the wealth and goods you pass on to your family, and that's something I work on regularly. As for the second, this is the key. Your legacy can be the values you pass on to the following generations. This builds into something bigger than you or any stockpile of cash ever could become, and that's special. This also requires you to do some self-examination. What are your values? How do you share them with your family? Do you follow them all the time and use them as filters when you make decisions? Finding the answers to those questions will set you down the path to truly crafting a family legacy. How to Find Your Values This is oversimplifying things a bit. While it's easy for me to say you should go out and find your values, actually doing so is a little bit more complicated. I have a worksheet in my book that can help with the process. The first step is to find ten words that resonate with you. They're words like Balance, Independence, Humility, Respect, and so on. Once you find them, you should expand on those ideas. Why are they important to you, and what makes them valuable? Write all of this down on a piece of paper. Now have your family go through the same process. See what words you all have in common, and create a family values list. You can create core values out of this as well, which are the ones that, above all else, your family will always stick to. This is an enlightening process. By discovering the values you have in common with your family, you build a framework for how you live your lives. As your children grow, they will take these values with them and repeat the process with their own families. Some of them will take root and stick. Others may fall by the wayside. The result is a system unique to your family. Standing the Test of Time You've created a legacy—one that can last for decades, if not longer. It's a bit introspective, and it can create some friction. But in the end, your legacy is more than about money; it's about ideals and values. There's nothing more valuable than that.

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