Emile Zola

audiobook

Emile Zola

by William Dean Howells

EN·~23 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total
1

EMILE ZOLA

23:50

Description

In this thoughtful essay, the author turns a keen eye on the towering figure of Émile Zola, examining how his fierce commitment to realism both defined and confined his work. Written not long after Zola’s death, the piece situates him within the shifting currents of his time, suggesting that the debate over his legacy remains as vital as ever. It invites listeners to consider how a writer’s ideals can both illuminate and limit the stories they tell.

The discussion moves through Zola’s most famous novels—L’Assommoir, Nana, Germinal—showing how each tackles a single, powerful theme while wrestling with the broader, unruly truth of life. The author highlights Zola’s paradoxical blend of romantic impulse and realist rigor, portraying him as a poet‑like chronicler of society’s raw edges. By the end, listeners are left with a nuanced portrait of a writer whose influence continues to spark lively conversation about the nature of fiction and the world it strives to mirror.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~23 minutes (22K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Anthony J. Adam.

Release date

1996-11-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Dean Howells

William Dean Howells

1837–1920

A leading voice of American literary realism, he helped shape late 19th-century fiction through his novels, criticism, and editorial work. His writing often brings ordinary social life into sharp, lively focus, with a calm wit that still feels fresh.

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