Serotonin (2019) undoubtedly represents Michel Houellebecq's most "Proustian" novel. His narrator, a forty-six-year-old agricultural engineer, who became desperately impotent by a regular absorption of "new-generation anti-depressants", scrutinizes his "phallocentric memory" to revisit all his missed appointments with the great Romantic Love that could have saved him.
Our analysis proves that Serotonin is not just a "prefiguration of the Yellow vests movement", an "illustration of European agricultural crisis" or a "conservative flirt with Christianism" (which commentators are accustomed to identify in Houellebecq's work) but also a somewhat astonishing reflection on the functioning of memory and the mechanisms of love.