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| Original Title: | La Princesse de Clèves |
| ISBN: | 0192837265 (ISBN13: 9780192837264) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Characters: | Henri II of France, Jacques de Savoie, duke of Nemours, The Princess of Clèves, Mary, Queen of Scots, Catherine de' Medici |
Madame de La Fayette
Paperback | Pages: 288 pages Rating: 3.43 | 9577 Users | 482 Reviews

Identify Containing Books The Princesse de Clèves
| Title | : | The Princesse de Clèves |
| Author | : | Madame de La Fayette |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Oxford World's Classics |
| Pages | : | Pages: 288 pages |
| Published | : | November 11th 1999 by Oxford University Press (first published March 17th 1678) |
| Categories | : | Classics. Cultural. France. Fiction. European Literature. French Literature. Historical. Historical Fiction |
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***Advance Review Copy generously provided through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.Well, I have to say the moment I saw this book I thought that it would be about Anne of Cleves a.k.a. the luckiest wife of Henry VIII.
I never heard about the book The Princess of Clèves before, so, I was in for a surprise.
As for this comics, it was very well done. I liked the art, the muted colours which I felt fitted it very well. The storyline was simple, but I was interested in seeing where it was going.
However, me being me, I have some issues with it. I suppose the story took several years, but the characters kept wearing the same clothing! (Okay, sometimes the main character changed the colour of her dress, but it still felt like the same dress. I'm here for the dresses!)
It may be because it was supposed to help you to tell the characters apart and I can get that because I kept confusing the husband and the uncle of the main character plus another guy was pretty similar but he disappeared pretty quickly from the story.
But the unchanged dresses were bugging me!
I'm not sure how much time has passed, it started in winter 1558, Henry II of France died in July 1559 which is like 2/3 into the story. So, it may be two years or so.
Then, some dialogues were a bit tedious, spreading over several pages, and I had to skip them cause I could not do with the pathos.
But overall, I did enjoy it, it was a fun evening reading this, and I think I may even have a look at the original book!
Overall, I would say 3,5 stars. 👗👗👗
Rating Containing Books The Princesse de Clèves
Ratings: 3.43 From 9577 Users | 482 ReviewsWrite-Up Containing Books The Princesse de Clèves
I knew very little about this book. Only that it was written in the seventeenth century, while set in the mid sixteenth century, and that former President Sarkozy of France felt that it was by itself holding back France from becoming a World leading super-power-mega-empire simply by clogging up the literature curriculum in schools (view spoiler)[ or something along those lines any how (hide spoiler)]. This last point was plainly a good enough reason for reading, if a head of state disapproves of***Advance Review Copy generously provided through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.Well, I have to say the moment I saw this book I thought that it would be about Anne of Cleves a.k.a. the luckiest wife of Henry VIII. I never heard about the book The Princess of Clèves before, so, I was in for a surprise. As for this comics, it was very well done. I liked the art, the muted colours which I felt fitted it very well. The storyline was simple, but I was interested in seeing where it was
No one is more surprised than me at how much I liked this book because this is not my kind of book at all. But the writing was so addicting and the storyline was so interesting.Around The Year in 52 Books Challenge #8 - A classic with less than 200 pages

The nice thing about reading early specimens of what later become modes or genres is watching the problems that people will keep dealing with come up and be solved with elegant simplicity. So here, Lafayette wants to distance her stories from the romance tradition, without getting rid of all the fun stuff about the romance tradition (e.g., the idea of chivalric love and the turmoil it causes). She does it very easily, by turning to history. Her characters are for the most part historical figures
A little too far back into French literary history for me. This is one of the earliest French novels, inasmuch as it tells historical events with inaccuracies. These inaccuracies form the fiction part of what is ostensibly an historical account of events at court over a century earlier. Madame de LaFayette might not even be the author/chronicler of this tale! What intrigue! What potential for interpretation! The prose is what one might call prehensile and the story what one might call shit.
N.B.: I have never studied French literature and in fact was completely unaware of this work's existence until a week and a half ago. So, although I am going to praise the work of Terence Cave in translating, introducing, and annotating La princesse de Clèves, please don't believe a word I say!I'm going to come back and put in a paragraph here about how there was one sentence in Daniel Pennac's The Rights of the Reader that made me want to read this book right away. But I want to quote that
Aside from its significance in literary history (the first example of the modern psychological novel), this book provides some useful background reading for Proust. The constellation of royal and noble families in which the Baron de Charlus, in particular, is always elucidating his position, is shown here at its apex of dominance.The plot itself includes a few devices that were probably already hackneyed in 1678 (overhearing a crucial conversation while hiding in some bower), but includes quite

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