
Living in a modest garret on the Rue de Lesdiguieres, the narrator spends his days buried in books and his evenings wandering the bustling streets of Paris. He has honed a rare talent for slipping into the lives of the working folk he watches, feeling their worries, hearing their arguments, and cataloguing the quirks of a neighbourhood that teems with ambition, poverty, and unfiltered humanity. Through these quiet observations he begins to map the “heterogeneous mass” of the city’s people, noting how love, hunger, and hope play out in everyday conversations.
When his charwoman—a hard‑working wife of a cabinetmaker—asks him to attend her sister’s wedding, his habit of vicarious participation takes a concrete turn. The invitation promises a glimpse into the intimate rituals of the lower classes, setting the stage for a story that blends personal curiosity with the larger tapestry of Parisian life. Listeners will be drawn into the narrator’s keen eye for detail and his subtle, compassionate exploration of a world on the brink of change.
Language
en
Duration
~31 minutes (29K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny, and David Widger
Release date
2004-09-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1799–1850
A giant of French fiction, he turned the crowded streets, salons, and back rooms of 19th-century France into vivid, gripping stories. His vast cycle of novels and tales, known as La Comédie humaine, helped shape the modern realist novel.
View all books