This delightful introduction to the life and works of Montaigne explains the enduring relevance of this sixteenth-century genius. Michel Montaigne’s life as an essayist began in a period of crushing depression brought on by the deaths of a daughter, his brother, his father, and his closest friend. With his country embroiled in a bloody religious war, the French aristocrat withdrew to the tower library of his family estate outside Bordeaux and resolved to write and to prepare himself for his own death. Out of Montaigne’s grief came one of the most important literary works in history: Les Essais, his “attempts” to understand his world and life through scholarship and personal reflection. With these writings—which consider subjects as varied as friendship, war, travel, cannibalism, and even the oft-neglected thumb—Montaigne recovered his sense of wonder and curiosity, and his zeal for life. That his work has captivated readers for more than four hundred years is a result, as Saul Frampton makes clear, of Montaigne’s irresistible mix of introspection and open-mindedness, an intelligence that—in our world of confessional memoirs and blogs about the details of daily life—still feels thoroughly modern. When I Am Playing with My Cat . . . brings us closer to one of the most humane, wise, and enchanting writers in the history of Western literature.
LoC Classification |
PQ1643 .F73 2011 |
Dewey |
844/.3 |
No. of Pages |
426 |
Height x Width |
216
x
147
mm |
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