by Jules Renard (Author), Theo Cuffe (Translator), Julian Barnes (Introduction by)
A wry, observant masterpiece--one of the singular treasures of the French fin de siècle
Written between the age of twenty-three and his death at age forty-six, Jules Renard's
Journal 1887-1910 is a triumph of introspection and wit. One of the most celebrated figures of Belle Époque Paris, Renard was also a prolific diarist whose private musings were first published in five volumes some fifteen years after his death. Acclaimed by everyone from Somerset Maugham to Samuel Beckett to Susan Sontag, the
Journal has had a decisive influence on contemporary letters and was named one of the 100 Books of the Century by
Le Monde. It is also a singularly funny work, full of aphorisms, jokes, and sly observations on some of literature's most indelible characters.
These selections, brought together by Julian Barnes and translated by Theo Cuffe, offer unparalleled and unfailingly entertaining glimpses of a bygone world. Moving from modish Parisian salons to the French countryside, where Renard served as a provincial mayor in the final years of his life, the
Journal is a portrait of a society in flux and a playground for one of the era's great prose styles. Here, Renard confirms his place among France's most dazzlingly inventive writers.
Author Biography
Jules Renard (1864-1910) was a French author and member of the Académie Goncourt. A habitué of Parisian literary circles, he was the author of numerous novels and plays, among them Carrot Top and Natural Histories. His Journal, widely considered his masterpiece, was published posthumously between 1925 and 1927.
Julian Barnes is the Booker Prize-winning author of
The Sense of an Ending and numerous other books.
Theo Cuffe is known for his translations of classic French literature, including Voltaire's
Candide and
Micromégas and Other Short Fictions.
Number of Pages: 400
Dimensions: 1.4 x 7.5 x 5 IN
Publication Date: March 08, 2022