
PARIS - The Three Cities - By Émile Zola - Translated By Ernest A. Vizetelly
PARIS - FROM THE THREE CITIES - By Émile Zola - Translated By Ernest A. Vizetelly
BOOK I.
TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE
I. THE PRIEST AND THE POOR
II. WEALTH AND WORLDLINESS
III. RANTERS AND RULERS
IV. SOCIAL SIDELIGHTS
V. FROM RELIGION TO ANARCHY
BOOK II.
In the bustling streets of late‑19th‑century Paris, a weary priest named Abbe Pierre Froment arrives, haunted by doubts that have followed him from the miraculous grotto of Lourdes to the corridors of the Vatican. His inner conflict—between the comforting rituals of his faith and the stark realities of a rapidly modernizing city—drives the narrative forward, offering a vivid portrait of a man caught between belief and reason.
Against this personal turmoil, Zola paints a portrait of a capital in flux: cafés filled with heated debates, factories belching smoke, and political pamphlets proclaiming new ideologies. Through Froment’s eyes, listeners encounter the tension between a waning religious authority and the rising voices of socialism, science, and individual liberty. The novel’s naturalistic style immerses you in the sights, sounds, and restless energy of a Paris that is both beautiful and bruised, inviting reflection on the timeless struggle between tradition and progress.
Language
en
Duration
~20 hours (1159K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-10-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1902
A fearless French novelist who turned ordinary lives into gripping fiction, he helped define literary naturalism and gave the world classics like Germinal and Thérèse Raquin. His writing was never just about story—it was also a way of confronting injustice head-on.
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by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola