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Balzac's Paris

The City as Human Comedy

Author Eric Hazan
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Hardcover
5.75"W x 8.55"H x 0.73"D   | 11 oz | 28 per carton
On sale Jun 25, 2024 | 208 Pages | 9781839767258
Exploring Paris arm in arm with Balzac, nineteenth-century France’s most famous novelist and observer

In Balzac’s vast Human Comedy, a body of ninety-one completed novels and stories, he endeavoured to create a complete picture of contemporary French society and manners. Within this work is a loving ode to Paris and an incomparable introduction to the first capital of the modern world.

To this ageless city he makes a declaration of love in an accumulation of finely observed detail – the cafés, landmarks, avenues, parks – and captures the populace in countless meticulously drawn portraits: its lawyers, grisettes, journalists, concierges, usurers, salesmen, speculators.

Balzac gathered the elements of this Paris by sauntering through it. ‘To saunter is a science,’ he writes, ‘it is the gastronomy of the eye. To take a walk is to vegetate; to saunter is to live.’ Eric Hazan follows in Balzac’s footsteps, criss-crossing the city in the novelist’s outsize boots, running between printers, publishers, coffee merchants, mistresses and friends, stopping for a moment, struck by a detail that would be fixed in Balzac’s photographic memory.

More than a tour of the city, Balzac’s Paris is an attempt to measure the soul of a city as recovered in its finest literature.
Eric Hazan is the founder of the publisher La Fabrique and the author of many books, including Paris in Turmoil, A Walk Through Paris, A People's History of the French Revolution, A History of the Barricade, Notes on the Occupation and the highly acclaimed The Invention of Paris. He has lived in Paris, France, all his life.
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Translations and Acknowledgements


Why Paris?
A Wanderer
The Street
Quarters
The Press
Publishers
At the Theatre
Friends, Politics, and the ‘Realism’ of Balzac’s Paris


Notes
Index
"Amid the intellectual murkiness of the European scene, a few bright flames are burning: as witness the work of Eric Hazan."
New Left Review

"Hazan's scrupulous readings of Balzac bring 19th-century Paris to life, shedding light on the social friction between old money and the nouveau riche that shaped the city in the wake of the 1830 July Revolution. It's an enchanting literary love letter to the City of Lights."
Publishers Weekly

"Eric Hazan's delightful cultural history Balzac's Paris: The City as Human Comedy, ably translated from the French by David Fernbach, traces the roughly 35 years that Balzac spent living and working in the City of Light."
—Tobias Grey, Air Mail

"Hazan is charmed to be in the company of his hero, and for the course of a 200-page tour we are pleased to follow along."
—Oliver-James Campbell, Spectator

"Hazan narrates in the manner of a tour guide, hopping from location to location and offering up nuggets of commentary: pertinent quotes from the novels, or Balzac's personal correspondence; etymological titbits; an apposite line from Baudelaire or Proust. The format, and the languid, dizzyingly directionless prose style, will be familiar to readers of Hazan's best-known work, The Invention of Paris, a sprawling radical history of the city"
—Houman Barekat, Guardian

"A stellar feat of scholarship..."
Wall Street Journal

"Denizens of [Balzac's] city waltz in and out of the narrative, coupling and uncoupling, striving and skulking, gambling and dying ... a journey worth taking, reminding us that through its many renovations, Paris has remained a place where “everything smokes, everything burns, everything shines, everything bubbles, everything flames, evaporates, is extinguished, rekindled, sparkles, fizzles and is consumed”."
—Lauren Elkin, Financial Times

"[Hazan] died three weeks before the appearance of Balzac’s Paris in English. Fortunately, he left behind this illuminating, encyclopaedic work of fewer than 200 pages."
—James Campbell, Times Literary Supplement, Books of the Year 2024

About

Exploring Paris arm in arm with Balzac, nineteenth-century France’s most famous novelist and observer

In Balzac’s vast Human Comedy, a body of ninety-one completed novels and stories, he endeavoured to create a complete picture of contemporary French society and manners. Within this work is a loving ode to Paris and an incomparable introduction to the first capital of the modern world.

To this ageless city he makes a declaration of love in an accumulation of finely observed detail – the cafés, landmarks, avenues, parks – and captures the populace in countless meticulously drawn portraits: its lawyers, grisettes, journalists, concierges, usurers, salesmen, speculators.

Balzac gathered the elements of this Paris by sauntering through it. ‘To saunter is a science,’ he writes, ‘it is the gastronomy of the eye. To take a walk is to vegetate; to saunter is to live.’ Eric Hazan follows in Balzac’s footsteps, criss-crossing the city in the novelist’s outsize boots, running between printers, publishers, coffee merchants, mistresses and friends, stopping for a moment, struck by a detail that would be fixed in Balzac’s photographic memory.

More than a tour of the city, Balzac’s Paris is an attempt to measure the soul of a city as recovered in its finest literature.

Creators

Eric Hazan is the founder of the publisher La Fabrique and the author of many books, including Paris in Turmoil, A Walk Through Paris, A People's History of the French Revolution, A History of the Barricade, Notes on the Occupation and the highly acclaimed The Invention of Paris. He has lived in Paris, France, all his life.

Table of Contents

Translations and Acknowledgements


Why Paris?
A Wanderer
The Street
Quarters
The Press
Publishers
At the Theatre
Friends, Politics, and the ‘Realism’ of Balzac’s Paris


Notes
Index

Praise

"Amid the intellectual murkiness of the European scene, a few bright flames are burning: as witness the work of Eric Hazan."
New Left Review

"Hazan's scrupulous readings of Balzac bring 19th-century Paris to life, shedding light on the social friction between old money and the nouveau riche that shaped the city in the wake of the 1830 July Revolution. It's an enchanting literary love letter to the City of Lights."
Publishers Weekly

"Eric Hazan's delightful cultural history Balzac's Paris: The City as Human Comedy, ably translated from the French by David Fernbach, traces the roughly 35 years that Balzac spent living and working in the City of Light."
—Tobias Grey, Air Mail

"Hazan is charmed to be in the company of his hero, and for the course of a 200-page tour we are pleased to follow along."
—Oliver-James Campbell, Spectator

"Hazan narrates in the manner of a tour guide, hopping from location to location and offering up nuggets of commentary: pertinent quotes from the novels, or Balzac's personal correspondence; etymological titbits; an apposite line from Baudelaire or Proust. The format, and the languid, dizzyingly directionless prose style, will be familiar to readers of Hazan's best-known work, The Invention of Paris, a sprawling radical history of the city"
—Houman Barekat, Guardian

"A stellar feat of scholarship..."
Wall Street Journal

"Denizens of [Balzac's] city waltz in and out of the narrative, coupling and uncoupling, striving and skulking, gambling and dying ... a journey worth taking, reminding us that through its many renovations, Paris has remained a place where “everything smokes, everything burns, everything shines, everything bubbles, everything flames, evaporates, is extinguished, rekindled, sparkles, fizzles and is consumed”."
—Lauren Elkin, Financial Times

"[Hazan] died three weeks before the appearance of Balzac’s Paris in English. Fortunately, he left behind this illuminating, encyclopaedic work of fewer than 200 pages."
—James Campbell, Times Literary Supplement, Books of the Year 2024
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