The simplicity of the style of the French writer Françoise Sagan, the spontaneity of her language, the sincerity of her photography, and her ability to penetrate the psyches of the characters in her novels and choose the ordinary daily concerns of people, made her novels best-sellers, and gave her the hearts of people regardless of their intellectual affiliations and literary inclinations, not only in France, but in all the countries of the world that... Her novels were translated into their languages.
It was said about her: "Françoise Sagan went out to break the silence, unleash anger, and end the anxiety that dominated the younger generation in Europe after the devastating years of war. She went out to express her generation's aspirations, desires, and dreams, and to reveal their daily concerns and problems away from the hustle and bustle of war and painful memories."
However, there were some critics who saw her fictional works as merely small books, lacking warmth, as no events of great importance occurred in them, except for some romantic situations that did not arise from desire. However, these critics admit that Sajjan's style is simple and devoid of artificiality. It is also full of allusions and symbols.