Journal des Goncourt (Deuxième série, premier volume)

audiobook

Journal des Goncourt (Deuxième série, premier volume)

by Edmond de Goncourt, Jules de Goncourt

FR·~8 hours

Chapters

Description

A candid, day‑by‑day account opens the volume, letting listeners hear the intimate voice of a writer who feels compelled to record the raw truth of his time. He moves from quiet moments in his family home to the unsettling memories of loss, describing the small domestic details that linger in his mind. The diary immediately places us in the turbulent summer of 1870, as the siege of Paris and the fledgling Commune loom on the horizon.

Interwoven with personal grief are striking anecdotes that capture the absurdity and horror of war—a cannon’s wheel greased with a fallen soldier’s brain, a curé’s modest parish house, and the ever‑present chatter of a faithful dog. The narrator’s yearning to preserve these fragments “until twenty years after his death” gives the journal a poignant urgency, while his reflections on love, faith, and everyday hardship create a vivid portrait of life on the brink of upheaval. Listeners will feel the tension between private sorrow and public turmoil, all narrated in a voice that is both tender and unflinching.

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Details

Full title

Journal des Goncourt (Deuxième série, premier volume) Mémoires de la vie littéraire

Language

fr

Duration

~8 hours (497K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-12-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Edmond de Goncourt

Edmond de Goncourt

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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Jules de Goncourt

Jules de Goncourt

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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