They haven’t been seen together since last April, but the photos we released this week, ¡HOLA!, clear up all the unknowns surrounding Carlotta Casiraghi and Nicolas Mathieu.
The princess and the writer went out Walking the streets of ParisVery cheerful and sharing confidence. In fact, according to the French magazine Public, their relationship will continue to strengthen and they could even take an important step: that live together.
According to the publication, Carlotta left the house she lived in with Dimitri Rassam during their marriage and moved into an apartment in the French capital with Nicolas – which they were seen entering.
Although Only time can tell If, in fact, they live together, and if their story continues to progress, the fact that it seems that the daughter of Princess Carolina of Monaco has regained her enthusiasm with the French novelist.
After her split with the film producer – after four years of marriage and one child together – rumors of a possible romance began to swirl last February, when Voysey magazine published photographs showing her leaving Carlotta’s home in Paris. Suspicions that were confirmed a month later.
In March, our magazine published new photos that show the complications that exist between the two.
In a recent interview, Dr telegraphShe had never spoken before about motherhood and how important the “freedom” she wanted after the end of her marriage to Rasam was.
United in the same passion: literature
What is undeniable is that Carlotta and Nicolas are united – apart from paternity, they are both parents – by a common passion, literature. Nicolas is a popular writer in France – winner of the prestigious Goncourt Literature Prize in 2018 for his book After them are their children-.
Carlotta, who studied philosophy at the Sorbonne University in Paris, He is a voracious reader -“I always loved books, even before I knew how to read,” he has come to admit-, who has also made his way into the world of letters, debuting as a writer in 2018. Islands of emotionA book that he dedicated to his father, Stefano Casiraghi -who died in 1990-.
Princess also has a reading club – Les Rendez-vous littéraires rue Cambon (Literary meeting on Cambon Street)-, with the help of the Channel, where it hosts interesting literary meetings, reminiscent of the literary salons created by the French nobility in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Among her favorite authors are many classics, such as Flaubert or Virginia Woolf, and other contemporaries, such as Joan Didion or Michel Houellebecq.