Suicide is a short novel by Édouard Levé noted for its precise language and seemingly random structure meant to imitate human memory.
An excerpt of Suicide titled Life in Three Houses appeared in the April 2011 issue of Harper's.
After the main body of the work (the prose), there are pages of verse that "your wife" found in "your desk drawer".
[3] Much of the analysis and interpretation of Suicide hinges on the fact that ten days after giving the text to his publisher, Levé hanged himself.
[4] Throughout the work, Levé ensures "your" motivations for committing suicide are unknown to the narrator and, consequently, the reader.