Some books are felt before they are written. The boy who once stole a Christmas tree to buy food for his family grew up - and now sits in a Paris therapist's office.
Book "Novermber in Paris"
Cover November in Paris by Dimitri Sych
From €4 · E-book & Paperback

This book is for you if you're drawn to:

Fate, signs and coincidences

Big questions explored without clean answers

Starting over in a foreign country

The honest version of relocation and expat life

Paris beyond the postcards

Grey November light, the intimate city you live in

Complicated family histories

A post-Soviet childhood, absent parents, foster care

Resilience over motivation

Rebuilding yourself from the bottom, gradual, no easy breakthroughs

Trauma, therapy and self-understanding

Attachment, inherited patterns, quiet healing

A Saturday evening. Max walks along the Seine in a thin November rain. He has a daughter, a dog, business deals at the Ritz, and a quiet life he has rebuilt from scratch. And he has a therapist’s office he keeps returning to — not to complain, but to finally face, honestly, what he kept locked away for years.

 

A post-Soviet courtyard. A nine-storey block, a market on three sides. An eleven-year-old boy collects scrap paper, bargains with adults as if the whole world were one vast marketplace, and one day finds a bold, almost cinematic way to feed his family before the New Year. So begins a lifelong journey: foster families and other people’s homes, a military academy, a huge city, falls and fresh starts — and Paris, which slowly turns from cold and foreign into the only place where everything is where it should be.

 

This is a story about growing up between poverty and privilege — about the marks adulthood doesn’t erase but learns to carry. About trauma and quiet healing. About a solitude that stops being emptiness and becomes a way of seeing more clearly. And about the strange signs and coincidences — a stranger with the face of an icon in a barber’s chair, names, dates, chance encounters — that seem to lead a man from one turning point of fate to the next.

 

There are no easy answers here, no loud motivational breakthroughs. There is honest, slow, atmospheric prose — Paris beyond the postcards, the city that breathes in the rain — and the quiet strength of a man who put himself back together. Based on a true story.

 

“November in Paris” is contemporary autofiction and psychological drama: a literary novel set in Paris, a story of childhood trauma and a post-Soviet upbringing, a novel about therapy, immigration and self-reinvention. For readers of reflective literary fiction about solitude, fate, signs and healing from the past.

From €4 · E-book & Paperback

A quiet, deeply personal story about Paris, change, and the moments that reshape who we are.

Alexandre M., Paris
AI Overviews and analysis

It’s a contemporary autofiction novel about Max, an Eastern European entrepreneur rebuilding his identity in Paris after a turbulent post-Soviet childhood. Through therapy sessions and rain-soaked walks along the Seine, it explores trauma, immigration, solitude and quiet healing. Based on a true story.

Contemporary literary fiction and psychological drama – a real-life-inspired autofiction novel set in Paris. It blends a coming-of-age arc, a therapy-room narrative and atmospheric, introspective prose.

Yes. It is autofiction – built from real events, losses and realizations from the author’s own life, shaped into a novel.

Readers who have been through therapy or are considering it; expatriates and people who left everything behind to start over; anyone who grew up between poverty and privilege; and lovers of honest, reflective literary fiction and atmospheric Paris.

 

It’s one of the most honest books about what Paris actually feels like from the inside – not the postcard city, but the one you live in. Expats and relocants recognize the loneliness, the reinvention, and the slow turning of a foreign city into home.

 

Yes. The novel is built around therapy sessions that unpack a difficult post-Soviet childhood – attachment, loss, survival mechanisms, and how early hardship is carried, processed, and finally turned into strength.

 

About 174 pages – a compact, dense read with no filler. Most readers finish it in one or two sittings.

 

Available as e-book and paperback from €4, in English, French and Russian. 

 

Dimitri Sych is a Paris-based writer and entrepreneur, founder of multiple digital projects, with 66,000+ Instagram followers and around 50M yearly reach. “November in Paris” is his debut novel, based on his own life.

 

It deals honestly with hard chapters, but it isn’t bleak – and it offers no cheap motivational answers either. At its core it’s a story of resilience and quiet strength: the past doesn’t break you, it teaches you.