#honoré de balzac

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With the world turned upside down, we could all use something to look forward to—so, for the next few weeks, we’ll be highlighting our new season of books coming in the fall. First up are four new nonfiction titles from our New York Review Books series, all arriving in September: a literary biography of Balzac, a memoir on loss, the autobiography of an artist too long mistaken for a muse, and a collection of entire essays on single sentences.

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Peter Brooks, Balzac’s Lives

Balzac’s massive exploration of French society, The Human Comedy, is said to have invented the nineteenth-century novel, if not the nineteenth century itself (according to Oscar Wilde). Here, writer and scholar Peter Brooks examines the man behind the masterpiece in a vivid and searching study that is based on a close examination of his extraordinary characters—from the capitalist Gobseck to the gay criminal mastermind Collin.

Dorothy Gallagher, Stories I Forgot to Tell You

Dorothy Gallagher’s husband, Ben Sonnenberg, the author of Lost Property: Memoirs and Confessions of a Bad Boy (out in June), died over a decade ago after a long battle with multiple sclerosis. In Stories I Forgot to Tell You, she moves between present and past, the smallest moments of life with her husband and her life after him. It’s a quirky and profound portrait of love, of loss, and of two writers sharing a life.

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Celia Paul, Self-Portrait

Celia Paul, one of Britain’s greatest painters alive today, lived long in the shadow of the domineering artist Lucian Freud: their decades-long relationship began when she was eighteen and he fifty-five. This intimate, introspective memoir puts her finally at the center of her own story, with poignant reflections on Freud as well as childhood, family, and motherhood, and above all her unyielding dedication to art. 

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Brian Dillon, Suppose a Sentence

Brian Dillon’s last book, Essayism, was a roaming love letter to literature’s perhaps most indefinable form. In this collection, he offers a series of essays prompted by a single sentence—from Shakespeare to Janet Malcolm, John Ruskin to Joan Didion—exploring style, voice, language, and the subjectivity of reading.

Level Five, dir. Chris Marker, 1996Catherine BelkhodjaLevel Five, dir. Chris Marker, 1996Catherine Belkhodja

Level Five, dir. Chris Marker, 1996
Catherine Belkhodja


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“Si la presse n'existait pas, il faudrait ne pas l'inventer.”

Honoré de Balzac

Gif de Wifflegif/ Miranda Kerr

I have borrowed a copy of Balzacs L'amour masque from my grandfather. It was originally owned by my great-grandmother and was printed in 1911 and has beautiful art noveau artwork in it. It is in a swedish translation, of course, since my french is terrible, but the swedish it is written in is archaic for my 2013 eyes, which makes it even more exciting. It is a piece of treasure, at least for me.
   I tried to do some research about the the book before I wrote this post, but surprisingly little was found. I could not even find an English title, and if it is the case that this book is translated to Swedish and not to English, I find it a bit strange since English is a much larger language than Swedish. Can anybody help me find information about this book?

Good bye to you


Balzac’s Chin / photograph from the cover of “The Human Comedy” 1893 (or La Comédi

Balzac’s Chin / photograph from the cover of “The Human Comedy” 1893 (or La Comédie Humaine) by Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850)

Originally Posted: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mamluke/4154062330/


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