Ratings32
Average rating3.3
The story of an ambitious youth without birth or fortune in France in the 19th century.
Reviews with the most likes.
‘Conte Altamira told me once that, on the eve of his death, Danton said in his loud voice: “It is strange, the verb to guillotine cannot be conjugated in all its tenses; one can say: I shall be guillotined, thou shalt be guillotined, but one does not say: I have been guillotined.”
The obsession with status, honor, and the games played between lovers all seems very distant, as a novel from this period ought to do.
I was impressed with the penetrating anger of the young Julien at the society he enters, preserved throughout despite the kindness shown to him. It feels so real, in comparison to the more typical character of a fully coopted figure we might expect whose nobility and compassion prevail. The key word in reviews is “hypocrisy” and there is plenty of it, but I would say bitterness is the powerful emotion found dripping on each page.
Favorite quotes:
15 (Everyman edition): ‘I like shade, I have my trees cut so as to give shade, and I do not consider that a tree is made for any other purpose, unless, like the useful walnut, it yields a return' There you have the great phrase that decides everything at Verrières: YIELD A RETURN; it by itself represents the habitual thought of more than three fourths of the inhabitants.
295 ‘I am independent, myself' ... ‘Why should I be expected to hold the same opinion today that I held six weeks ago? If I did, I should be a slave to my opinion.”