
ÉMILE ZOLA - THÉRÈSE RAQUIN - I
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A narrow, damp corridor beneath the bridges of Paris sets the stage, its cracked stones and soot‑blackened glass casting a perpetual twilight over cramped shop windows. The air is thick with the smell of mildew and the clatter of hurried footsteps, while dim gas lamps flicker like distant beacons in an otherwise oppressive gloom. Within this claustrophobic world, a modest mercerie displays faded lace, threadbare stockings and cheap trinkets, each item reflecting the muted lives that pass by.
There, a young woman named Thérèse lives a quiet, constrained existence, married to a sickly, work‑obsessed husband who seems more a burden than a companion. Her days are a monotony of chores and silent longing until a chance encounter with a charismatic friend awakens feelings she has never known. Their growing attraction threatens to disturb the fragile balance of her ordinary life, setting the stage for choices that could reshape everything around her.
Language
fr
Duration
~6 hours (401K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1902
A fearless French novelist and journalist, he helped define literary naturalism with vivid, unflinching stories about ordinary lives. His work also made him a major public voice during the Dreyfus Affair, showing how literature and conscience could meet.
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