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| Original Title: | Le blé en herbe |
| ISBN: | 0374250693 (ISBN13: 9780374250690) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Literary Awards: | PEN Translation Prize Nominee for Zack Rogow (2005) |
Colette
Hardcover | Pages: 186 pages Rating: 3.52 | 1319 Users | 120 Reviews
Narrative Toward Books The Ripening Seed
In Ripening Seed Colette captures that precious, painful moment when childhood retreats at the onslaught of dawning knowledge and desire. Philippe and Vinca are childhood friends. In the glowing days and mist-filled nights of late summer on the Brittany coast, their deep-rooted love for each other loses its childhood simplicity. Philippe is destined to learn from experience, while Vinca, like all women the world over, is blessed, or cursed, with instinctive powers of perception and wisdom. Sharp and sad, haunted on every page by the sights, smells and sounds of the sea coast, this evocation of wounded, and wounding, innocence will be read with tears of sympathy and deep, lasting pleasure.
Describe Epithetical Books The Ripening Seed
| Title | : | The Ripening Seed |
| Author | : | Colette |
| Book Format | : | Hardcover |
| Book Edition | : | First Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 186 pages |
| Published | : | June 1st 1955 by Farrar Straus Giroux (first published 1923) |
| Categories | : | Fiction. Cultural. France. Classics. European Literature. French Literature. Romance |
Rating Epithetical Books The Ripening Seed
Ratings: 3.52 From 1319 Users | 120 ReviewsJudge Epithetical Books The Ripening Seed
Densely poetic, its peculiar structure no doubt down to its original serialisation, like a series of polaroids which primarily focus on the male character but occasionally, unexpectedly, give us a close up of one of the two key female characters. Brims with guarded sensuality that only really takes off in the final chapter where the central conflict is somewhat resolved, but leaves us with an unromantic, and therefore probably truer, view of love than any number of Mills and Boon stories.How Colette captures the innocence and beauty of youth in this quintessential coming-of-age novel amazes me, especially considering her own history. The novel never becomes tasteless, and verges on wistful.
I spent seven years searching for a copy of this book in multiple cities. It was a poignant experience reading this book.

*WARNING - You're about to head into Spoiler Town, please turn around if this is not your intended destination**Disclaimer - this is required reading for university*Well, this has to be one of the most uncomfortable books I have ever read.Why, I hear you ask?An over thirties woman seduces a sixteen year old boy.Over thirties.Sixteen.CAN YOU SEE THE PROBLEM HERE?Our lecturer warned us that this book was sexual, and my GOD it was sexual, althought Colette has this uncanny ability to describe very
This is the first non-Claudine book of Collette's that I've read. I have to say I did not care for it at all. I don't really like her male characters and this was all from the male's point of view. It was a teen romance about a 16 year old, wanting to marry a 15 year old and having an affair with an older woman that didn't do anything for him. It just felt so pointless. The only thing it did was make me want to eat seafood. Not really one I can recommend.
Enjoyed the actual writing. Enjoyed most of it, in fact, in the way that I enjoy lovely writing about silly teenage angst. What bumped it down significantly in my view is the use of the trope that Girls Have Instinctive Wisdom.Nope. No, girls are dumb too.But the book was a nice and short read and made me want to go vacation on the Brittany coast.
The first thirty or so pages were dazzling. Two adolescents on holiday on the Brittany coast are discovering sexual feelings for each other. The descriptions of this awakening in the girl, Vinca, and how she responds, sometimes like a shy wild animal, sometimes like the prototype of a sophisticated woman, were particularly compelling. The coastal setting too was beautifully evoked and poignantly conveyed the delicate balance between childhood simplicity and rousing sensual knowledge. Then the

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