Sarkozy's 'Journal d’un prisonnier' nears 100,000 copies sold in first week

Following its December 10 release, Nicolas Sarkozy's 'Journal d’un prisonnier'—detailing his recent detention—has sold 98,610 copies by December 16, according to NielsenIQ GFK, topping sales charts, publisher Fayard reports.

Nicolas Sarkozy's 'Journal d’un prisonnier' (Fayard, 216 pages, €20.90) has achieved phenomenal success, selling 98,610 copies in under a week since its December 10 release—one month after his November 21 liberation under judicial supervision.

As previously covered, the book recounts his 21-day detention at Paris's La Santé prison starting October 21, following a September 25 conviction (under appeal) for 'association de malfaiteurs' in the 2007 campaign's alleged Libyan financing.

Publisher Fayard hails the sales as 'phenomenal,' with the title leading charts per NielsenIQ GFK. Sarkozy has launched a signing tour in cities like Paris, Marseille, Menton, and Versailles, leveraging the book amid his legal battle and public image rehabilitation. Fayard is owned by Vincent Bolloré.

مقالات ذات صلة

Nicolas Sarkozy holding his book 'Journal d’un prisonnier' with subtle La Santé prison background, realistic news illustration.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Nicolas Sarkozy publishes his prison journal

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

One month after his release from La Santé prison, former president Nicolas Sarkozy publishes his book Journal d’un prisonnier with Fayard on Wednesday. In this 216-page work, he recounts his three weeks of detention, religious reflections, and political critiques. Excerpts reveal an experience marked by isolation and perceived injustice.

Former President Nicolas Sarkozy releases 'Journal d’un prisonnier', depicting ten years of persecution leading to an unjust conviction based on a false document. He likens his brief detention to that of Captain Dreyfus, a victim of historical judicial error. The book serves as a judicial and political weapon to shape his image as an innocent.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Former President Nicolas Sarkozy was imprisoned on Tuesday, October 21, 2025, at La Santé prison in Paris, one month after his conviction for criminal conspiracy in the Libyan financing case of his 2007 campaign. Two security officers were placed in an adjacent cell to ensure his protection, while his lawyers immediately filed a release request. This incarceration marks a historic first for a former French head of state.

Paris correctional court on Friday convicted five people for cyberharassing Sophie Djigo, a philosophy teacher targeted after planning a school trip to a migrant camp. Sentences reached eight months suspended prison, with sensitization courses.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

A 74-year-old retired farmer has been sentenced to six months' suspended prison for crushing an egg on Jordan Bardella's head during a book signing in Moissac at the end of November 2025. The Montauban court also imposed a 1,000-euro fine and damages. This incident follows similar actions by the defendant in the past.

A Paris criminal court on March 25 sentenced 63-year-old Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan, grandson of Muslim Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna, to 18 years in prison in absentia for raping three women. Despite an arrest warrant, he remains near Geneva in psychiatric treatment at the Clinique du Grand-Salève. Penalties include eight years of socio-judicial supervision and a lifetime ban from French territory.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Former socialist Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, aged 88, underwent a serious operation that went well and has returned home for recovery, according to a statement passed to AFP by his entourage.

 

 

 

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