Germinie Lacerteux

audiobook

Germinie Lacerteux

by Edmond de Goncourt, Jules de Goncourt

EN·~7 hours·77 chapters

Chapters

77 total

CHEFS D'ŒUVRE - DU - ROMAN CONTEMPORAIN

0:24

BIBLIOTHÈQUE DES CHEFS-D'ŒUVRE DU ROMAN CONTEMPORAIN

0:03

GERMINIE LACERTEUX

0:07

GERMINIE LACERTEUX

0:01

PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION

3:40

SECOND PREFACE - PREPARED FOR A POSTHUMOUS EDITION OF GERMINIE LACERTEUX

20:38

I

9:56

II

45:32

III

12:22

IV

10:20

Description

In the bustling heart of mid‑nineteenth‑century Paris, a modest riverbank becomes the quiet stage for a stark portrait of survival. Germinie, a young mother clinging to her infant, shares a simple day of fishing with Jupillon, a seasoned Parisian who finds solace in his line and the gentle flow of water. Their brief respite hints at the fragile balance between hope and hardship that defines the lives of the city’s forgotten. Through unflinching realism, the novel invites listeners to feel the textures of street‑level existence—dusty alleys, cramped lodgings, and the relentless march of illness that threatens to strip away identity.

The narrative does more than recount daily toil; it interrogates the moral blind spots of a society that celebrates glamour while ignoring suffering. As Germinie’s world unravels, the reader encounters the stark contrast between the genteel prefaces of the era and the raw, unvarnished truth of poverty. This early segment sets the tone for a compassionate yet unsettling exploration of human dignity, making the story a powerful reminder that the most ordinary lives can hold the deepest tragedies.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (420K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Meredith Bach and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2009-01-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Edmond de Goncourt

Edmond de Goncourt

1822–1896

Best remembered as one half of the Goncourt brothers, he helped shape French literary realism and left behind a vivid record of 19th-century artistic life. His name also lives on through the Académie Goncourt, created from his will and later associated with France’s most famous literary prize.

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Jules de Goncourt

Jules de Goncourt

1830–1870

A sharp-eyed chronicler of 19th-century Paris, he wrote side by side with his brother Edmond and helped shape the naturalist style in French literature. Their novels, art writing, and famously observant journal captured the moods, manners, and talk of their age.

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