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| ISBN | 0812966759 | | DEWEY edition | DC21 | | ISBN13 | 9780812966756 (What's this?) | | Pages | 272 | | Publisher | Random House USA Inc | | Volumes | 1 | | Imprint | Modern Library Inc | | Weight (grammes) | 200 | | Format | Paperback | | Published in | New York | | Publication date | 02 Jun 2005 | | Series title | Modern Library Classics | | Translator | Jordan Stump | | Height (mm) | 205 | | Writer of introduction | Adam Gopnik | | Width (mm) | 134 | | Library of Congress | PQ2165 | | Spine width (mm) | 15 | | DEWEY | 843.7 | | Academic level | General |
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"What a glorious find! Here is a tale of strange and wonderful passions, mystery, intrigue, and the dark night of the soul. In this fresh and fluent translation, Balzac's masterful depiction of our human comedy proves once again that this giant of the nineteenth-century novel will always remain among the most modern of writers."-Linda Coverdale "Smartly paced, passionately full of Parisian excitement, this brisk new translation proves that theFrench master never lost his powerful, teeming urgency. Balzac's last novel deserves its posthumous place in La Comedie humaine." -Burton Raffel "Baudelaire was surprised that Balzac's reputation depended on passing for an "observer"; "for me," the poet said of the novelist, "his great virtue lies in the fact that he was a visionary, a passionate visionary," Such a judgment brings us, not face to face but as in a glass darkly, to the Master's last, flagrantly figmentary fiction, wonderfully titled in English to form the revelatory equation: "Paris = history," Mr. Stump has again triumphed over his material, which means that the material here stands forth in all its messy, enthralling "richesse," and with excellent notes "into the bargain," as Balzac would say."-Richard Howard "From the Hardcover edition."
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