Bouvard and Pecuchet with The Dictionary of Accepted Ideas

by Gustave Flaubert

Other authorsA. J. Krailsheimer (Translator), A. J. Krailsheimer (Introduction)
Paperback, 1981

Status

Available

Call number

843.8

Collection

Publication

Penguin Classics (1981), Paperback, 336 pages

Description

Bouvard and Pécuchet are two Chaplinesque copy-clerks who meet on a park bench in Paris. Following an unexpected inheritance, they decide to give up their jobs and explore the world of ideas. In this, his last novel, unfinished on his death in 1880, Flaubert attempted to encompass his lifelong preoccupation with bourgeois stupidity and his disgust at the banalities of intellectual life in France. Into it he poured all his love of detail, his delight in the life of the mind, his despair of human nature, and his pleasure in passionate friendship. The result is "a kind of encyclopedia made into farce," wholly grotesque and wholly original, in the spirit of Gargantua and Pantagruel, Don Quixote or Ulysses.

Language

Original language

French

Physical description

336 p.; 7.88 inches

ISBN

0140443207 / 9780140443202

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