The Discovery of France

Front Cover
Picador, 2007 - History - 454 pages

It's easy to reduce France to the sum of its parts: weekend breaks amid the culture of Paris or summer holidays basking in the sunshine of the south; accounts of the Revolution -- Madame Defarge knitting beside the guillotine -- and Napoleon's battle at Waterloo (mis)remembered from school history lessons; a country famous for its intellectuals, its philosophers and writers, its fashion, food and wine.

Despite this, however, the notion of 'the French' as one nation is relatively recent and -- historically speaking -- quite misleading; in order to discover the 'real' past of France, it's not only necessary to go back in time, but also to go at a slower pace than modern life generally allows: this book is the result of 14,000 miles covered by bicycle (and four years spent in the library). It is -- at last -- a book which tells the whole story.

Praise for Robb's last novel, Strangers: Homosexual Love in the Nineteenth Century:

‘Funny, enterprisingly researched, and undertaken with few apparent preconceptions . . This is an excellent, amusing, decent book, which covers an enormous amount of ground in a little space’ Philp Hensher, Spectator

‘A fascinating study of a complex subject, written with humanity, sceptical intelligence and an impressive command of the sources’ Daily Telegraph

‘A fascinating mix of personal testimony and judiciously filleted history’ The Times

From inside the book

Contents

THE UNDISCOVERED CONTINENT
3
THE TRIBES OF FRANCE I
19
O Òc Sí BAI YA WIN OUI OYI AwÈ JO JA OUA
50
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Graham Robb was born in Manchester in 1958. He has published widely in nineteenth-century French literature: his highly acclaimed adaptation of Claude Pichois and Jean Ziegler’s biography of Baudelaire appeared in 1989, his biography of Balzac in 1994, his Victor Hugo – winner of the Royal Society of Literature Heinemann Award and the Whitbread Biography Award – in 1997, and his critically applauded biography of Rimbaud in 2000. He lives in Oxford.

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