The Fortune of the Rougons - Emile Zola - Books - Createspace - 9781500662363 - July 28, 2014
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The Fortune of the Rougons

Emile Zola

The Fortune of the Rougons

Publisher Marketing: The Fortune of the Rougons is the initial volume of the Rougon-Macquart series. Though it was by no means M. Zola's first essay in fiction, it was undoubtedly his first great bid for genuine literary fame, and the foundation of what must necessarily be regarded as his life-work. The idea of writing the natural and social history of a family under the Second Empire, extending to a score of volumes, was doubtless suggested to M. Zola by Balzac's immortal Comedie Humaine. He was twenty-eight years of age when this idea first occurred to him; he was fifty-three when he at last sent the manuscript of his concluding volume, Dr. Pascal, to the press. He had spent five-and-twenty years in working out his scheme, persevering with it doggedly and stubbornly, whatever rebuffs he might encounter, whatever jeers and whatever insults might be directed against him by the ignorant, the prejudiced, and the hypocritical. Truth was on the march and nothing could stay it; even as, at the present hour, its march, if slow, none the less continues athwart another and a different crisis of the illustrious novelist's career. It was in the early summer of 1869 that M. Zola first began the actual writing of The Fortune of the Rougons. It was only in the following year, however, that the serial publication of the work commenced in the columns of Le Siecle, the Republican journal of most influence in Paris in those days of the Second Empire. The Franco-German war interrupted this issue of the story, and publication in book form did not take place until the latter half of 1871, a time when both the war and the Commune had left Paris exhausted, supine, with little or no interest in anything. No more unfavourable moment for the issue of an ambitious work of fiction could have been found. Some two or three years went by, as I well remember, before anything like a revival of literature and of public interest in literature took place. Thus, M. Zola launched his gigantic scheme under auspices which would have made many another man recoil. The Fortune of the Rougons, and two or three subsequent volumes of his series, attracted but a moderate degree of attention, and it was only on the morrow of the publication of L'Assommoir that he awoke, like Byron, to find himself famous. Review Citations: Ingram Advance 04/01/2005 pg. 157 (EAN 9781595690104, Paperback) Contributor Bio:  Zola, Emile Emile Zola is the ever-popular author of "Nana, Germinal", and many other novels. "The Ladies' Paradise" is the eleventh book in his Rougon-Macquart series, the "Natural and Social History of a Family under the Second Empire." Kristin Ross is Associate Professor of French Literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released July 28, 2014
ISBN13 9781500662363
Publishers Createspace
Pages 310
Dimensions 189 × 246 × 17 mm   ·   557 g

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