Friday, December 30, 2022

Father (Père) Goriot







La Comédie humaine is the title of Honoré de Balzac's (1799–1850) multi-volume collection of interlinked novels and stories depicting French society in the period of the Restoration and the July Monarchy (1815–1848).

Although some characters appear in many of the novels, they can be read in any order. 

This is my second in the series. The other one being The Wild Ass's Skin.

This is the story of the sweet Pere Goriot who gives all that he has for his daughters who do not appreciate him! Spoiled brats. 

Sweet character, but he was a major enabler.


Here is why James Mustich thinks it should be one of the 1000 Books You Read Before You Die:

In simple outline, the book sounds like a poor man’s King Lear: A retired businessman is done in by the greed and callousness of his ungrateful daughters. What distinguishes this tale in the fullness of its telling, however, is the way in which Balzac uses Goriot’s sad circumstances to paint a dynamic portrait of a society so entangled with venal motives that even the most fundamental human emotions are perverted. The novelist ironically traces Goriot’s descent from prosperity to poverty by sending him ever higher in Madame Vauquer’s boarding house. In the end, our sympathy for old Goriot is mitigated by our awareness that he has been complicit in his own misery, ruined by the monomania that twists his parental affection into a desperate avarice. Like the fatal flaw of many of Balzac’s memorable protagonists, his obsession is neither unimaginable nor obscure, and all the more terrible for its familiarity.

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