Le Grand Meaulnes

Front Cover
Penguin, 1990 - Fiction - 206 pages
The classic French novel written by a soldier, who would later die during World War I, tells the story of Auguste Meaulnes and the "domain mysterieux."
 

Contents

II
11
III
17
IV
19
V
23
VI
26
VII
30
VIII
34
IX
39
XXVII
105
XXVIII
107
XXIX
113
XXX
116
XXXI
120
XXXII
125
XXXIII
127
XXXIV
131

X
42
XI
45
XII
47
XIII
51
XIV
53
XV
56
XVI
61
XVII
67
XVIII
72
XIX
77
XX
79
XXI
83
XXII
87
XXIII
92
XXIV
96
XXV
99
XXVI
103
XXXV
139
XXXVI
145
XXXVII
150
XXXIX
154
XL
161
XLI
163
XLII
167
XLIII
171
XLIV
177
XLV
181
XLVI
187
XLVII
189
XLVIII
194
XLIX
199
L
204
Copyright

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About the author (1990)

Alain-Fournier was born Henri Alban Fournier, on October 3, 1886, in La Chapelle-d'Angillon, France. His untimely death in action during World War I came just before his twenty-eighth birthday, barely one year after the publication of his first and only novel, the minor classic, Le Grand Meaulnes. Published in English translation in 1928 as The Wanderer, and in a new translation in 1959 as The Lost Domain, this single testament to Fournier's artistic promise influenced writers between the World Wars and still inspires admiration. Suffused with elements of symbolism and surrealism, Le Grand Meaulnes recreates with dreamlike richness the lost "land without a name" of Alain-Fournier's happy childhood in the French countryside. Alain-Fournier's novel was the result of a series of disappointments. He was haunted for years by an obsession for a beautiful blonde woman whom he barely knew. He failed to pass the entrance examination to the prestigious Ecole Normale and a licence examination in English. While in a stormy relationship with a new love in 1910, Le Grand Meaulnes began to take form. In the summer of 1913 Le Grand Meaulnes was serialized in La Nouvelle Revue Francaise, edited by Jacques Riviere, Alain-Fournier's life-long friend and brother-in-law. Le Grand Meaulnes was published in book form in October 1913, nearly winning the Goncourt Prize. Called up to serve with his former regiment at the outbreak of World War I, Alain-Fournier was killed on September 22, 1914, in battle near Vaux-les-Palameix, France. His body was not recovered.

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