All
Books Written By
Gustave Flaubert
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Born: December 12, 1821, in Rouen,
France
Died: May 8, 1880, in Croisset, France
Gustave Flaubert was the second son of Achille Cl�ophas Flaubert, the chief surgeon at
the H�tel-Dieu in Rouen. His mother was the daughter of a wealthy doctor.
He began writing at a very early age and his first published work appeared when he was
only sixteen. He was a solitary youth with a rich imagination that served him well in the
creation of prose. Despite his young age, he tackled the complexities of love and inner
strife which were presented in his M�moires d'un fou ; the
expression of his infatuation with Elisa Sch�singer.In 1841, Flaubert entered the
faculty of Law in Paris but was forced to withdraw from studies when he discovered that he
was afflicted with epilepsy. He continued to write but none of his major works were
published during this period. In 1846 his father died, and his sister died a year later as
a result of complications during childbirth. Her child survived and Flaubert, his mother
and the new child moved to Croisset.
At around this same time, Flaubert met and began an affair with Louise Colet. After nine
years together, his stubborn independence and her jealous nature forced them to separate.
During their time together, Flaubert traveled extensively throughout the Middle East and
Greece with Maxime du Camp. The sights and impressions from these travels would later
appear as the rich backdrops of his story Salammb�, published in 1862.
Perhaps his most famous work is Madame Bovary, his first major
work to be published. The story details the romantically motivated, marital indiscretions
and subsequent suicide of a wife in a French provincial town. The text, published by du
Camp in installments, is a condemnation of what he sees as the petty, drab lives of the
French Bourgeois class. His attention to detail, the development of psychological
character profiles and disinterested narrative style distinguish this book from many
others.
Flaubert was not a prolific writer and often took years to finish his books. His objective
was to sculpt beautiful prose, with exact meaning rather than to produce large quantities
of work. He died suddenly of a stroke and his final work, Bouvard and Pecuchet,
was posthumously published unfinished. |
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Madame Bovary
One of the more important works in the
development of the novel, marked by Flauberts precise detailed descriptions. This
book, the story of an ordinary woman unhappily married to a dull young doctor, brought
legal prosecution against Flaubert on the grounds of immorality.
Bouvard and Pecuchet
Flaubert in Egypt
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