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Bouvard et Pécuchet

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About This Book

Two middle-aged clerks become friends and, after acquiring enough means, retire to the countryside where they devote themselves to self-education. Through a series of episodic experiments in gardening, medicine, natural history, politics, religion, and the arts, they enthusiastically adopt and abandon methods and doctrines, applying half-understood theories to practical affairs. Each project collapses into confusion, farce, or harm, exposing the limits of amateurism, the emptiness of encyclopedic ambition, and the comic persistence of bourgeois vanity. The fragmentary narrative accumulates setbacks and absurd outcomes that satirize the promise of rational mastery and the stubborn repetition of human folly.

About the Author

Flaubert, Gustave portrait

Gustave Flaubert

Gustave Flaubert was a prominent French novelist and a key figure in literary realism. Born in 1821, he is best known for his groundbreaking work "Madame Bovary," which explores the life of a disillusioned woman seeking escape from her provincial existence. Flaubert's meticulous attention to detail and innovative narrative techniques have left a lasting impact on modern literature. His other notable works include "Sentimental Education," which reflects on the complexities of youth and ambition, and "Bouvard and Pécuchet," a satirical examination of bourgeois life. Flaubert's exploration of themes such as desire, disillusionment, and the search for meaning continues to resonate with readers today.

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