Nana

0
0

Nana opens in 1867, the year of the World Fair, when Paris, thronged by a cosmopolitan elite, was a perfect target for Zola's scathing denunciation of hypocrisy and fin-de-siecle moral corruption. In this new translation, the fate of Nana—the Helen of Troy of the second Empire, and daughter of the laundress in L'Assommoir —is now rendered in racy, stylish English.

Page Count:
472

|

Publication Date:
1983-02-24

Literature & Fiction

Classics

Community Tags

Similar Books

A Volume in the Autograph of Yaqut, the Geographer (574-626/1179-1229): A Brief Description with a Reproduction of the Manuscript of the Tamam Fasih Al-Kalim of Ibn Faris (Chester Beatty Monographs)
The Elements of Screenwriting
Rite of Passage
D. H. Lawrence: Portrait of a Genius But--
W.E.B. Dubois Reader
Joseph Conrad
F. Scott Fitzgerald: The Man and His Work
Self-Discovery (English and Russian Edition)
Elkhorn Tavern
Murder fantastical (An Inspector Henry Tibbett mystery)
The Barefoot Brigade
The Voyage of the Mimi: The Book
Winding Stair
The Road Not Taken: An Introduction to Robert Frost
Taking to Water