
Step into the private notebook of a mid‑century French writer as he records the rhythm of his days between 1862 and 1865. The pages blend mundane moments—visits to cramped family rooms, encounters with strangers in bookstores, and the cold hush of New Year’s reflections—with sharp commentary on politics, art, and the shifting fortunes of the bourgeoisie. Through terse, witty dialogues the narrator captures the texture of Parisian life, from the murmurs of a passing beggar to heated debates about Greek versus Japanese aesthetics.
The journal reads like a mosaic of observations, each entry a snapshot of cultural anxieties and fleeting pleasures. Readers hear the clatter of the Quai Voltaire market, the irony of a man demanding history books while lamenting their absence, and the melancholy of a society balancing nostalgia and modernity. This intimate chronicle offers a vivid portrait of a restless era, inviting listeners to hear the thoughts that shaped literary circles long before the great novels emerged.
Full title
Journal des Goncourt (Deuxième volume) Mémoires de la vie littéraire
Language
fr
Duration
~7 hours (445K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-01-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1822–1896
Best known for the books and journals he created with his brother Jules, this 19th-century French writer helped shape literary realism and left a lasting mark on French literary culture. His name lives on through the Prix Goncourt, one of France’s most famous literary awards.
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1830–1870
Known for writing side by side with his older brother Edmond, this 19th-century French author helped shape modern literary realism with novels, art criticism, and one of the era’s most vivid journals. His short life left a lasting mark on French letters, especially through the legacy that later inspired the Prix Goncourt.
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