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Madame de Sevigne

Madame de Sevigne

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $35.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Madame de Sévigné: A Life and Letters
Review: Frances Mossiker has given us a wonderful compilation of noted epistolarian, Marie de Rabutin-Chantal(1626-1696), Madame de Sévigné's letters. Seventeenth-century France will come vibrantly alive while you read this book. Ms. Mossiker has meticulously researched this comprehensive biography.

I especially enjoyed the intimate look at her royal and commoner friends. Madame was friends with many of the brilliant thinkers of the day such as ballet writer Benserade and fable writer La Fontaine. Her descriptions of life at the court of Louis XIV are fascinating.

Most of the letters written were from Mother to Daughter. Their sometimes tense relationship is an engrossing psychological study. After a prolonged absence Madame de Sévigné learns her daughter is coming to visit:

"So you are coming!" she writes. "And I will have the pleasure of welcoming you, embracing you, giving you a thousand little tokens of my love and solicitude. Anticipation fills my heart with a sweet,deep joy..."

A thoroughly enjoyable, charming, divine book. Not to be missed!

(Musee Carnavalet in Paris is where Madame de Sévigné lived for almost twenty years. The building has been converted to a museum with a wonderful section devoted to her.)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Madame de Sévigné: A Life and Letters
Review: Frances Mossiker has given us a wonderful compilation of noted epistolarian, Marie de Rabutin-Chantal(1626-1696), Madame de Sévigné's letters. Seventeenth-century France will come vibrantly alive while you read this book. Ms. Mossiker has meticulously researched this comprehensive biography.

I especially enjoyed the intimate look at her royal and commoner friends. Madame was friends with many of the brilliant thinkers of the day such as ballet writer Benserade and fable writer La Fontaine. Her descriptions of life at the court of Louis XIV are fascinating.

Most of the letters written were from Mother to Daughter. Their sometimes tense relationship is an engrossing psychological study. After a prolonged absence Madame de Sévigné learns her daughter is coming to visit:

"So you are coming!" she writes. "And I will have the pleasure of welcoming you, embracing you, giving you a thousand little tokens of my love and solicitude. Anticipation fills my heart with a sweet,deep joy..."

A thoroughly enjoyable, charming, divine book. Not to be missed!

(Musee Carnavalet in Paris is where Madame de Sévigné lived for almost twenty years. The building has been converted to a museum with a wonderful section devoted to her.)


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