Germinie Lacerteux

audiobook

Germinie Lacerteux

by Edmond de Goncourt, Jules de Goncourt

FR·~6 hours·74 chapters

Chapters

74 total
1

ROMANS - DE - EDMOND ET JULES DE GONCOURT - GERMINIE LACERTEUX

0:08
2

PRÉFACE DE LA PREMIÈRE ÉDITION

3:19
3

GERMINIE - LACERTEUX - I.

10:20
4

II.

42:30
5

III.

11:25
6

IV.

9:41
7

V.

6:06
8

VI.

10:07
9

VII.

4:43
10

VIII.

3:42

Description

In a cramped Parisian attic, a young maid rushes to tend a frail, dying woman, the air heavy with the scent of oil lamps and the ticking of an old brass clock. The opening places us squarely in the world of the city's poorest, where every cracked window and faded tapestry bears witness to a life of relentless hardship. Through vivid, unflinching detail, the narrative invites listeners to feel the cold stone walls and the quiet desperation that lives within them.

Beyond the immediate scene, the story follows Germinie, a girl whose fragile body masks a fierce will to survive amid the indifference of a society that grants her little more than charity. The author treats her plight not as melodrama but as a clinical study of love, loss, and the social forces that shape the destinies of the forgotten. Listeners will be drawn into a compassionate yet stark portrait of 19th‑century France, where the line between victim and survivor blurs with each breath.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~6 hours (381K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-12-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Edmond de Goncourt

Edmond de Goncourt

1822–1896

A sharp-eyed chronicler of 19th-century Paris, he is remembered both for the books he wrote with his brother Jules and for the famous literary prize created from his estate. His journals and criticism helped preserve the moods, scandals, and artistic life of his era.

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Jules de Goncourt

Jules de Goncourt

1830–1870

A sharp-eyed observer of 19th-century Paris, he wrote closely with his brother Edmond to create novels, art criticism, and a famous journal that captured the literary life of their time. His name lives on through the Goncourt tradition, one of the best-known in French literature.

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