
In the sunny town of Tarascon lives Tartarin, a self‑styled hero whose grandiose tales of daring outstrip his modest surroundings. He boasts of future hunts and heroic deeds, and while the townsfolk smile at his flamboyant swagger, they see a harmless, well‑meaning fool.
His house is a curiosity, with a garden of potted palms, baobabs and bananas that turns the villa into a miniature savanna. Inside, walls are lined with an eclectic armory—rifles, daggers, spears—hinting at the grand expedition he plans. The story gently satirizes 19th‑century big‑game hunting and colonial pretensions, using Tartarin’s inflated confidence for comic effect.
As Tartarin prepares to set sail for Africa, his town watches with a mix of admiration and bemusement. Listeners are invited into a rollicking adventure that balances gentle mockery with affection for its eccentric protagonist, offering a charming glimpse of a bygone France.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (146K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Oliver C. Colt and David Widger
Release date
2006-03-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1897
Best known for bringing the warmth and color of Provence into French literature, this 19th-century writer mixed humor, tenderness, and sharp observation in stories that still feel vivid today. His work ranges from playful sketches and tales to novels with a darker, more realistic edge.
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