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Jean Sbogar, originally published in 1818 and here presented in a new translation by Brian Stableford, was the first work by the great French writer Charles Nodier to attract considerable attention, after it became known that the exiled Napoléon Bonaparte had read it with enthusiastic interest. This influential gothic novella, situated in Venice and its environs, which the author likely composed under the influence of opium, is a phantasmagorical tale of banditry and love, told with the flair of genius. Accompanying the primary work are two emotionally feverish novellas, Adèle and Thérèse Aubert, as well as three shorter items, all transitional pieces, intermediary in their philosophy, methodology and sophistication between the authors early novelettes and the more elaborate work of his final phase, but they are interesting in their own right as well as in the role of a set of stepping-stones. Cover by François Bellay Published by Snuggly Books in August 2021 |
The Brian Stableford Website |