La Bête humaine

audiobook

La Bête humaine

by Émile Zola

FR·~13 hours

Chapters

Description

In the bustling heart of a Paris railway station, a world of iron, steam and human ambition unfolds. Roubaud, the station master, watches the intricate choreography of locomotives and workers, his thoughts drifting between the machinery and the lives that pass through his domain. The narrative paints the station as a living organism, its sounds and smells echoing the restless energy of the Second Empire.

Amid the clang of brakes and the hiss of pistons, a family of railway employees—Henri, the chief conductor, and his sisters Claire and Sophie—bring a touch of domestic warmth to the industrial setting. Their everyday joys and struggles hint at deeper currents of desire, jealousy and fate that pulse beneath the surface of the tracks. As the trains roar toward distant destinations, the characters navigate personal entanglements that mirror the relentless motion of the rails, promising a tale where human instincts clash with the inexorable machinery of modern life.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~13 hours (758K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Émile Zola

Émile Zola

1840–1902

Best known for his vivid, unsparing novels of French life, this major 19th-century writer helped shape literary naturalism. He is also remembered for his fearless public defense of justice during the Dreyfus affair.

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