Chez l'illustre Écrivain

audiobook

Chez l'illustre Écrivain

by Octave Mirbeau

FR·~5 hours

Chapters

Description

In a sumptuously over‑decorated Parisian bedroom, a celebrated writer lounges amid a mishmash of English and Louis‑XVI furniture, his morning ritual dominated by the rustle of newspapers and a relentless need to be admired. He summons his valet to arrange a theatrical tableau—scattered invitations, a gleaming travel case, and an absurdly elaborate breakfast—just before the arrival of his weekly visitor. The setting is a lively portrait of vanity, where the walls themselves seem to echo the writer’s self‑congratulatory monologue.

When the timid, ever‑obsequious reporter finally steps across the threshold, the encounter unfolds as a dance of flattery. The author doles out exaggerated praise, insisting the interview is a friendship, while the reporter catalogues every trinket with reverent awe. Their banter, peppered with mentions of truffles, dukes, and extravagant expenses, satirically exposes the hollow grandeur of literary celebrity and the absurd lengths people will go to be noticed.

Details

Language

fr

Duration

~5 hours (310K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Laurent Vogel and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Release date

2021-11-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Octave Mirbeau

Octave Mirbeau

1848–1917

A sharp-eyed French novelist, playwright, and art critic, his work mixed biting satire with deep sympathy for people trapped by power and hypocrisy. Best known for daring books like The Torture Garden and Diary of a Chambermaid, he helped push French literature toward a more modern, unsettling edge.

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