Lettres à Mademoiselle de Volland

audiobook

Lettres à Mademoiselle de Volland

by Denis Diderot

FR·~20 hours

Chapters

Description

A series of tender letters opens a window onto the private world of a towering Enlightenment thinker. In his exchanges with a young Parisian woman, he blends playful flirtation with earnest reflections on literature, art, and the restless spirit that drives his work on the great encyclopedia. The correspondence reveals a man caught between public acclaim and personal longing, offering vivid snapshots of cafés, book‑shops, and the everyday struggles of a scholar navigating poverty and fame.

Beyond romance, the letters sketch the social fabric of mid‑century France: the tension between religious authority and emerging philosophy, the fragile fortunes of his family, and the small comforts that sustained him—simple meals, a shared cup of coffee, a smile across a shop counter. Listeners will hear a voice that is both witty and vulnerable, inviting them to experience the intimate side of a mind that shaped modern thought while wrestling with love, loss, and the ordinary moments that defined his life.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~20 hours (1205K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Laura Natal Rodriguez & Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously made available by Gallica, Bobliothèque nationale de France.)

Release date

2015-12-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Denis Diderot

Denis Diderot

1713–1784

A restless, wide-ranging mind of the French Enlightenment, he helped reshape how people thought about knowledge, art, religion, and freedom. Best known for co-editing the vast Encyclopédie, he also wrote daring, playful fiction that still feels fresh.

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