The Red and the Black
Written by Stendhal Stendhal
Narrated by Bill Homewood
4/5
()
About this audiobook
Stendhal Stendhal
Stendhal, de son vrai nom Marie-Henri Beyle, est né le 23 janvier 1783 à Grenoble, en France. Il est l'un des écrivains les plus éminents du XIXe siècle, connu pour ses romans d'analyse psychologique et sociale tels que Le Rouge et le Noir et La Chartreuse de Parme. Issu d'une famille bourgeoise, Stendhal a été profondément influencé par les idéaux de la Révolution française et par son admiration pour Napoléon Bonaparte, qu'il a servi en tant qu'officier de l'armée. Cette expérience a nourri son intérêt pour l'ambition et la lutte des classes, des thèmes centraux dans son oeuvre. Stendhal a débuté sa carrière littéraire avec des essais sur l'art et la musique avant de se tourner vers le roman. Le Rouge et le Noir, publié en 1830, est inspiré par un fait divers réel, l'affaire Berthet, et explore la complexité des émotions humaines à travers le personnage de Julien Sorel. Le roman a été salué pour sa profondeur psychologique et sa critique sociale, bien qu'il ait également suscité la controverse pour sa représentation de l'ambition et de l'immoralité. En plus de sa carrière littéraire, Stendhal a été un critique d'art perspicace et un diplomate. Il a passé de nombreuses années en Italie, où il a trouvé l'inspiration pour plusieurs de ses oeuvres. Sa capacité à capturer les nuances de la société et de la psychologie humaine a fait de lui un pionnier du réalisme et du romantisme. Stendhal est décédé le 23 mars 1842 à Paris, laissant derrière lui un héritage littéraire durable qui continue d'influencer les écrivains et les lecteurs du monde entier. Ses oeuvres sont aujourd'hui considérées comme des classiques de la littérature française, et il est reconnu pour son style incisif et sa capacité à dépeindre la complexité des relations humaines.
More audiobooks from Stendhal Stendhal
The Red and the Black Volume 1 Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Red and the Black Volume 2 Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for The Red and the Black
59 ratings26 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Stilistisch: Rake type-beschrijvingen (echte archetypen: M. de Renal, abb? de Frilair, Markies de la Mole enz); Opmerkelijk gebruik van de monologue interieure, vooral in deel 2; Duidelijk romantische trekjesFiguren: Niet altijd even consequente karaktererisering.Opmerkelijke vrouwenfiguren: Mathilde en Mme de Renal (geen voornaam), eigenzinnig, slagvaardig, wereldsHoofdfiguur: Julien, symbool van strijd tegen de burgerlijke orde, maar sterk realistische trek (wordt niet afgeschilderd als een sympathiek figuur). Ook politiek element aanwezig: heimwee naar gouden, roemruchtige Napoleontische tijd, toen er nog echte mannen waren.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Very enjoyable view of a romantic young social climber in post-Napoleonic France. I especially liked the way the satire rose with Julien's social surroundings. The historical footnotes were enormously helpful in placing the story in its context.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I think I read a bad translation of this book. The translation was from 1970, so I am hoping there are better ones out there now.Julien is a peasant in the early 1800s France. Napoleon is gone and the monarchy has been restored. Julien secretly idolizes Napoleon and despises the rich and the clergy.His father and brothers are carpenters, and he is weak and studious. They of course pick on him and slap him around, until one day Julien is asked to be a teacher for the children of a local family.Eventually he ends up at a monestery (I think) and then a secretary to a marquis. And then the downfall; and yes, it involves women!I had trouble liking the book until I got to the last 100 pages. I really think I would have liked it more if the translation had been more modern.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Stendahl didn't like the aristocracy or the clergy. And he thought ambition was a no-win way to behave.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I had some trouble getting into this novel, and did not like it as much as I had expected/hoped.In the novel, a young man, Julien Sorel, tries to reach a better position in society. He very much admires Napoleon and wishes for a life of greatness. In his search for greatness he gets wrapped up in two love affairs and ends up attempting to murder one of his lovers; he is subsequently condemned to death.I think my main problem with this novel was that I never really liked Julien or his actions - this made it hard for me to really connect with him. Julien is very much obsessed with improving his position in life and seems to have little regard for others. He decides on a religious career, not because of any religious feeling, but simply because he thinks it's the quickest way to get power and fortune. When he initiates his affair with Mme Renal, he is initially not really in love, but merely interested in getting the attention of a grand lady. When he seduces Mathilde, he also soon finds he has no real feelings for her. Though there are moments in the novel where Julien does show emotion, and he does discover his love for Mme Renal in the end, his main motives are mercenary. I found him an unpleasant and unlikable protagonist. Aside from this though, I have to admit that it is an interesting story, and a great sketch of the time and lives of people living shortly after the defeat of Napoleon. Aside from the story of Julien Stendhal adds a political and social background which gives an insight into the situation in those days.In many ways it is not a bad novel. The setting is great and historically very interesting, Stendhal's style of writing is nice, the descriptions are often beautiful and the characters are vivid and well-rounded. Yet, for me, the lack of likable characters and often negative, cynical views made it not a very pleasant read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I should reread this one, since I read it in...French in Portugal, about 40 years ago. There just weren't all that many books in the small fishing village in which I was spending a lot of that summer, and I was desperate. I liked the book a lot, but I suspect I didn't get a lot of the nuances, given the state of my French (primitive) and my lack of a French/English dictionary to consult. But the memory of those long days, and the beautiful ocean, combine very pleasantly in my mind, drenched in a perpetual sunlight having nothing to do with the plot.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5A difficult book on many levels. Julien Sorel is not a likeable character and no one else is really either. He rises from poverty, and makes a muddle of things on his rise. It is, I guess, an allegory on class warfare set in 1830 France.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5My grandmother Stella lived north of here. I was closer to her than anyone in my family. She loved classic cinema and read voraciously albeit trashy gothic romances. After my grandfather passed away I tried with varying success to ensure that I was with her every Thanksgiving. It should be noted here that she was a terrible cook. Lacking all facility in the kitchen., she approached the culinary arts with an appropriate cynicism I adored immensely. An agreement was reached and rather than suffer through another failed meal, we decided that I would buy pizza and pumpkin pie. It was such a small town Papa Johns that I finished the saga of Julian Sorel. His vagaries remained somewhat mysterious to me, I must admit.
I read the novel a second time in tandem with my wife. The novel's cryptic core had been elucidated. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5read so long ago I barely remember it. It was about french people... in the 19th century. A young man's choice between the military(red) or clerical(black) careers. I don't even remember which he chose.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Post-Waterloo France is depicted with simple realism as the milieu of Stendhal's flawed hero in this masterly novel. This translation reflects the panache and directness of the original.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Tedious. An inept blending of trite psychological 'insight' with melodrama, plus the worst Naxos reader ever, lugubrious and hamming up the dialogue almost laughably. The first half (Madame de Nerval and the seminary) is better than the second (Paris and Mathilde) but I'm amazed that this is called a classic.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A French version of the American success story but with a twist: deception and vice ruin the protagonist after he attains his dream.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5If you think you understand love or if you couldn't get through Stendhal's essays on love, try this on for size.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5We can't see what we have become without seeing who we were to start with. Trace us. Look into our soul.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Stilistisch: Rake type-beschrijvingen (echte archetypen: M. de Renal, abbé de Frilair, Markies de la Mole enz); Opmerkelijk gebruik van de monologue interieure, vooral in deel 2; Duidelijk romantische trekjesFiguren: Niet altijd even consequente karaktererisering.Opmerkelijke vrouwenfiguren: Mathilde en Mme de Renal (geen voornaam), eigenzinnig, slagvaardig, wereldsHoofdfiguur: Julien, symbool van strijd tegen de burgerlijke orde, maar sterk realistische trek (wordt niet afgeschilderd als een sympathiek figuur). Ook politiek element aanwezig: heimwee naar gouden, roemruchtige Napoleontische tijd, toen er nog echte mannen waren.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Stendhal had the rare talent of making even the trivial and mundane vibrate with meaning. Cold-eyed brilliance and smouldering passion (though not without moments of wildfire), this novel. I need not wonder why the famous French historian Hippolyte Taine read it more than 20 times. This is a masterpiece beyond question.There are several (I counted at least six in print) English translations of this novel. I recommend comparing excerpts. Some of the translations seemed less than engaging.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I have been living in Grenoble (Stendhal's birth place) for more than thirty years, and I had never read anything by him. (I escaped reading Le Rouge et le Noir at school for an unknown reason.) So I decided that I should do something.The LT automaton had warned me that I would love this book (with a very high probability). The first volume, when Julien Sorel lives in Verrières, is rather solidly built. To me, the great mystery of this first volume is how Stendhal could make his hero so despicable and antipathetic.I was not so sure to meet the LT automaton prediction when I began the second volume : I got the impression to be lost by Stendhal, first in the midst of the atmosphere of a seminary, then in the multitude of characters met in balls and parties in the Parisian high society. It was as if Stendhal was trying to make money in selling pages. Luckily, the end of the novel has a more steady pace and ends romantically, but also in a rather grand guignol way.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I was with this classic novel for several weeks. It failed to hold my interest in many spots, but I decided to persevere through, since it had an unusual ending. The protagonist, Julien Sorel, is an intelligent, ambitious and unscrupulous son of a saw mill operator in the remote provinces of France. In the first book he is hired as a tutor to a prententious mayors children, and seduces the mayor's wife, finally running to the seminary. In the second book he is appointed as a personal secretary to a Marquis, and seduces the Marquis daughter. When it appears that he will succeed in marrying the daughter, and has been set up as a gentleman by the Marquis, a letter from the first love arrives accusing Julien. He trys to shoot his first love, and is condemned, but since she doesn't die both her and the daughter of the marquis defend him to the end. Stendhal has an unusually wry and sarcastic voice as he describes the boredom of the nobles and the striving of the bourgeoisie.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5read the book for a class on the Euoperan novel. I am glad I did, there were some many good parts, reminded me especially the ending of campus the stranger. thought a lot about the idea of bad faith in reading the novel
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5No happy end!
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This book was lauded critically at many points in time. However, I did not find the nature of the book to be appealing and the writing felt stilted and forced. The characters I did not especially care for either, despite the extensive efforts of the author to try and describe and invigorate them.
Overall, disappointing. I do not recommend it. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Obviously a great influence of Proust. Took almost a month to read- but very compelling none the less. Nothing very exciting happened- perhaps it was the main character's daring and extreme reactions to events. Espionage was introduced briefly. I wish there was more of that. The end was very fatalistic.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Uncle! I've never given up on a book before, but I just can't do it. I can't finish this book. A woeful priest wanna-be that sleeps around with his bosses wife and then complains about how he'll never be much of anything because Napoleon didn't win and the rich folk are just keeping the clergy down.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I was really surprised to like this book as much as I did. The main character, Julien, is so calculatingly ambitious and oversensitive that it is hard to really like him. And yet, this novel kept me engaged through witty writing and an ending I did not see coming.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/51007 The Red and the Black, by Marie-Henri Beyle (De Stendahl) translated by C. K. Scott-Moncrief (read 10 May 1969) Sadly, my post-reading note on this book merely says I was somewhat impressed by it!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A book that as I read it wasnt sure what to make of it. Is it a treatise of love or a comment on the church? A priest with two mistresses, and no one is shocked, including the author. He becomes the cause celebe at the end.