The Kill (Oxford World's Classics)

the kill (oxford world's classics)

more information about The Kill (Oxford World's Classics)

The Kill (Oxford World's Classics)

Editorial Reviews
Book Description
The Kill (La Cur'ee) is the second volume in Zola's great cycle of twenty novels, Les Rougon-Macquart, and the first to establish Paris - the capital of modernity - as the centre of Zola's narrative world. Conceived as a representation of the uncontrollable 'appetites' unleashed by the Second
Empire (1852-70) and the transformation of the city by Baron Haussmann, the novel combines into a single, powerful vision the twin themes of lust for money and lust for pleasure. The all-pervading promiscuity of the new Paris is reflected in the dissolute and frenetic lives of an unscrupulous
property speculator, Saccard, his neurotic wife Ren'ee, and her dandified lover, Saccard's son Maxime.

From the Inside Flap
Here is a true publishing event–the first modern translation of a lost masterpiece by one of fiction's giants. Censored upon publication in 1871, out of print since the 1950s, and untranslated for a century, Zola's The Kill (La Curée) emerges as an unheralded classic of naturalism. Second in the author's twenty-volume Rougon-Macquart saga, it is a riveting story of family transgression, heedless desire, and societal greed.

The incestuous affair of Renée Saccard and her stepson, Maxime, is set against the frenzied speculation of Renée's financier husband, Aristide, in a Paris becoming a modern metropolis and "the capital of the nineteenth century." In the end, setting and story merge in actions that leave a woman's spirit and a city's soul ravaged beyond repair. As vividly rendered by Arthur Goldhammer, one of the world's premier translators from the French, The Kill contains all the qualities of the school of fiction marked, as Henry James wrote, by "infernal intelligence."

In this new incarnation, The Kill joins Nana and Germinal on the shelf of Zola classics, works by an immortal author who–explicit, pitiless, wise, and unrelenting–always goes in for the kill. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

The Kill (Oxford World's Classics)

The Kill (Oxford World's Classics),Emile Zola,Brian Nelson,Oxford University Press, USA,0192804642,European - French,Fiction,Fiction - Historical,Literary Criticism,Paris (France),Social life and customs,Classic fiction,French,Literary Criticism & Collections / French,Literature/English | World Literature | France

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Books Info

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