Girl with the Golden Eyes

Honorรฉ de Balzac, Carol Cosman, Robert Alter

Book cover for Girl with the Golden Eyes
Image for variant 9781681379067
Book cover for Girl with the Golden Eyes
Image for variant 9781681379067

Girl with the Golden Eyes

Girl with the Golden Eyes

Honorรฉ de Balzac, Carol Cosman, Robert Alter

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Description

This is the third part of the trilogy "The Thirteen". First part is entitled "Ferragus" and part two is entitled "The Duchesse de Lengeais". The story follows the decadent heir Henri de Marsay, who becomes enamored of the titular beauty, Paquita Valdes, and plots to seduce her. Though he succeeds, he becomes disillusioned when he discovers she is also involved with another lover, and plots to murder her. When he arrives to kill her, he discovers she's already dead by the hand of her lover - his half-sister. She declares that Paquita came from a land where women are no more than chattels, able to be bought and used in any way. In the last lines of the story, de Marsay laughingly tells a friend that the girl has died of consumption.

About the Author

Honorรฉ de Balzac (1799-1850), one of the greatest and most influential of novelists, was born in Tours and educated at the Collรจge Vendรดme and the Sorbonne. He began his career as a pseudonymous writer of sensational potboilers before achieving success with a historical novel, The Chouans. Balzac then conceived his great work, The Human Comedy, an ongoing series of novels in which he set out to offer a complete picture of contemporary society and manners. Always working under an extraordinary burden of debt, Balzac wrote some eighty-five novels in the course of his last twenty years, including such masterpieces as Pรจre Goriot, Eugรฉnie Grandet, Lost Illusions, and Cousin Bette. In 1850, he married Eveline Haล„ska, a rich Polish woman with whom he had long conducted an intimate correspondence. Three months later he died. In addition to The Girl with the Golden Eyes, NYRB Classics publishes The Human Comedy: Selected Stories, The Lily in the Valley, The Memoirs of Two Young Wives, and The Unknown Masterpiece.

Carol Cosman translated numerous French books over a range of genres--fiction, biography, memoirs, history, and philosophy. In addition to her translation of short fiction by Balzac, her English version of Jean-Paul Sartre's three-thousand-page The Family Idiot is especially noteworthy.

Robert Alter is an emeritus professor of Hebrew and comparative literature at the University of California, Berkeley. He has written widely on the European novel, particularly Balzac and Flaubert, and is the author of a critical biography of Stendhal. He lives in Berkeley.

Critical Reviews

"This is the magnificent and unforgettable tale in which sensuality grows out of mystery. . . . The begninning might have come from the pen of Dante, the end from the Thousand and One Nights, but the whole could only be the work of the man who wrote it."--Hugo von Hofmannsthal

"The Girl with the Golden Eyes is a truly audacious story, as Proust claimed: it opens to literary representation same-sex love generally kept in the closet or underworld."--Peter Brooks

"Perfectly contemporaneous with its era and timeless in its understanding of social snakes and ladders . . . the story escalates beautifully with surprises for all, destructive passions of all kinds and there's even room for a black joke in the final line. Like 19th-century engineers, they built stories to last back then." --John Self, The Critic (UK)

Publishing Information

Publisher: New York Review of Books
Pub date: 2025-07-01
Length: 112 pages

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