
The Charterhouse of Parma
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Compra ahora por $25.79
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Narrado por:
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Edoardo Ballerini
In the coming-of-age story, we follow a young Italian nobleman, Fabrizio Valserra, Marchesino del Dongo, on many adventures, including his experiences at the Battle of Waterloo, and romantic intrigues.
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I enjoyed the pronouncing of names and titles, the Italian puns, fights, court intrigue, and so much more. Charterhouse of Parma is a remarkable book and what’s more, being offered free of cost. I would also recommend Red and Black which has a hero at the centre who also finds himself engaging in adultery and revering Napoleon, and much like in the pertinent story, the character has an unhappy ending.
To the happy few
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A classic you don't want to miss
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Where does The Charterhouse of Parma rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
very highWho was your favorite character and why?
Mosca, a complicated characterWhat does Edoardo Ballerini bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
Depth, feeling, and wonderful pronunciation.If only all your readers of books with European words could pronounce them as well as he does.
I look for books that he reads.
Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
all of itAny additional comments?
Get Ballerini to do more readings.Napoleonic fiction
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I see many reasons why.
But I don’t think it’s great, however great might be defined.
I won’t bother you with all the features that are traditionally regarded as excellent or those that I admire. I’ll just say that I think the plot unwinds in ways that aren’t particularly interesting, and the characters sort of meander on to the end on disparate courses that seem rather contrived to me.
I take leave of the story with little of the inspiration or glow I tend to have after reading a great piece of literature.
The narration is more than satisfactory.
Highly Regarded, But…
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Any additional comments?
This is a remarkable enjoyable epic of a young man in search of love encountering the ways of the world which have not changed since this book was written. It reminded me of Voltaire's Candide but far more sophisticated in nuance and breadth and soul. It's comparison of the French and Italian personas is very interesting.Another version of Candide
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Started out great, but disappointed
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Beautiful in every way
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Lesser novel by a great writer
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Amazing novel finally available on audio!
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'O wretched soul, what sweetness it was!
How we burned at the moment when I saw
those eyes that I might never see again.'
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Lines from Petrarch, on handkerchief given secretly as a gift in novel's forbidden love affair
The 1839 The Charterhouse of Parma represented a movement away and forward from the romanticism of Stendhal's time, this was one of the earliest examples of realism in a way that was considered revolutionary then; Balzac considered it the most important novel of his time. Though some elements of the romantic emotionalism linger, the novel turns to realism in more fully exploring human nature and psychology of its primary characters.
Stendhal, like the protagonist Fabrice del Dongo, served with Napoleon's army in the 1812 campaign into Russia. After Napoleon's fall, Stendhal lived six years in Italy, a country he fell in love with, before returning to his native France.
Upon return from serving with Napoleon's army, del Dongo returns to the intrigue and politics of the court of Parma and fends off repeated advances from his relatively young aunt by marriage, 15 years his senior. He falls head over heels for the young maiden Clelia and they begin a platonic affair...until after she is married (and insists that they have sex in complete darkness so she would not be fully aware that she was committing an adulterous sin).
Once he deems the affair hopeless, that he can never be with his love, he turns to the cloth, escaping the cruel world into the charterhouse, or monastery.
I enjoyed it as a unique departure in my reading, appreciating the blend of the realism with some of the dramatically emotional pull of hopeless love.
O wretched soul, what sweetness it was!
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