
MARIE-CLAIRE
MARGUERITE AUDOUX
OCTAVE MIRBEAU. - ENSIMÄINEN OSA.
TOINEN OSA.
KOLMAS OSA.
A modest seamstress from a cramped workshop, barely earning enough for bread, is suddenly robbed of her sight by a painful eye disease. With needles set aside, she begins to write, not for fame but to escape the relentless grind of poverty and to give shape to the moments that sustain her. Encouraged by a circle of young artists, she puts her keen observations of daily life onto paper, turning hardship into a quiet, persistent voice.
The resulting novel reads like a finely tuned portrait of early‑twentieth‑century working‑class France. Every object, street corner and fleeting conversation is rendered with vivid clarity, while the prose glows with a gentle, unpretentious lyricism. Listeners will be drawn into a world where ordinary lives are illuminated with honesty and a lingering tenderness that lingers long after the story ends.
Language
fi
Duration
~3 hours (203K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Tuula Temonen and Tapio Riikonen
Release date
2021-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1863–1937
Raised in poverty and largely self-taught, this French novelist turned hard early experiences into clear, deeply felt fiction. She is best known for Marie-Claire, the novel that brought her wide recognition and the Prix Femina in 1910.
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