The Markets of Paris is a remarkable work, and is the one which Zola calls his very best novel, and of which he is far more proud than of any others in his Rougon-Marquart series – prouder than of L'Assommoir. It must have been in his early manhood, when poor and friendless, he lived among the people, that much of the information which makes these pages so startlingly vivid, was acquired. How many mornings, long before dawn, must he have visited these markets – how many hours and days must he have spent there, to have mastered the habits, manners and ways of these people, who are a class by themselves, and of whom we do not lose sight, from the beginning to the end of the book. He introduces us to the Parisian charcutier – the cook shop – and in La Belle Lina, the mistress of the establishment, we find the sister of Gervaise, the woman who stirred the depths of our hearts with pity, in L'Assommoir. In truth The Markets of Paris stands as utterly alone in modern French literature, as it is distinct and apart, from any other work even by Zola himself. It is a book for all to read
The Fortune of the Rougons
Émile Zola
bookNana
Émile Zola
audiobookbookThe Markets of Paris
Émile Zola
audiobookbookGerminal
Émile Zola
audiobookbookHis Masterpiece
Émile Zola
audiobookbookThérèse Raquin
Émile Zola
audiobookNana
Émile Zola
audiobookComment on se marie
Émile Zola
audiobookJ'accuse !
Émile Zola
audiobookbookDen store gruvestreiken
Émile Zola
bookTherese Raquin
Émile Zola
bookMesterværket
Émile Zola
book
France At War: On the Frontier of Civilization
Rudyard Kipling
audiobookAnne and Louis
Rozsa Gaston
audiobookNimitz Class
Patrick Robinson
audiobookPromised to the Crown
Aimie K. Runyan
audiobookThe Light of Paris
Eleanor Brown
audiobook1945
Robert Conroy
audiobookThe Bookseller : The First Hugo Marston Novel
Mark Pryor
bookEngland and Other Stories
Graham Swift
audiobookbookDavid Copperfield
Charles Dickens
audiobookbookArvingen
John Grisham
audiobook