
audiobook
by Edmond de Goncourt, Jules de Goncourt
A vivid, fragmentary diary captures the restless literary world of mid‑nineteenth‑century France. Through daily entries the narrator records evenings in bustling cafés, chance encounters with fellow writers, and the restless imagination that turns ordinary moments into surreal reveries—dreams of shifting rooms, strange spectacles, and luminous clouds that blur the line between reality and fancy. The journal also offers sharp observations on contemporary politics, the quirks of French society, and the temperament of celebrated authors whose habits are rendered with a mix of affection and candid critique.
Beyond the personal musings, the notebook becomes a window onto the cultural pulse of the era: lively debates about the novel’s moral purpose, reflections on the allure of the exotic, and the tension between French and English sensibilities at the dinner table. Readers are invited to wander through the same streets, salons, and imagined dreamscapes that shaped the literary conversations of the time, experiencing the same restless curiosity that drives the writer’s pen.
Full title
Journal des Goncourt (Troisième volume) Mémoires de la vie littéraire
Language
fr
Duration
~7 hours (439K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-11-21
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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