
Gustave Flaubert
Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880) was a French novelist considered one of the most important figures in literary realism. Born in Rouen to a surgeon father, he is best known for his masterpiece “Madame Bovary” (1857), which caused scandal upon publication and led to an obscenity trial. The novel’s precise, objective style and psychological depth established new standards for literary realism.
Flaubert was a meticulous craftsman who spent years perfecting his prose, famously searching for “le mot juste” (the right word). His other major works include “Salammbô” (1862), set in ancient Carthage, and “A Sentimental Education” (1869). He maintained extensive correspondence with contemporary writers including George Sand and Ivan Turgenev.
Known for his dedication to artistic perfection over commercial success, Flaubert influenced generations of writers including Guy de Maupassant, who was his protégé. His psychological realism and technical innovations helped bridge the gap between 19th-century realism and modern literary techniques.
Image Source: City Journal
- Realism
- 1821
- Male
- 1
-
(0)By : Gustave Flaubert
Madame Bovary
Emma Bovary is dying of boredom in her small French town, married to a kind but dull doctor who can’t ignite the passion she craves. She loses herself in novels, dreaming of grand love affairs and glittering society balls, until fantasy begins to bleed into reality through reckless affairs and ruinous spending. As her desperate hunt for beauty and meaning spirals beyond control, Emma discovers that some hungers can never be satisfied—and that the price of living entirely for desire might be everything she holds dear. What happens when a woman refuses to accept the life she’s been given and reaches for something that may not exist at all?
- Originally Published: 1857
- Publisher: VIVI Books, 2018
- Genre: Literary Realism
- Pages: 372
- BookType: Hardcopy/Hardcover
- ISBN: 9789386869289
- Access: Members