Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Catching up on the Classics

 Reading


Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin is a brutal and powerful book. I felt as if it was providing a deep look into past prejudices and how they destroyed their targets: namely, gay men. Published in 1956, it must have been a shock to readers — or perhaps the readers of that time held such negative views of gay men that they were insensitive to the impact of the self-hatred experienced by the narrator. Baldwin is brilliant in describing his character’s clear consciousness of how his peers must have detested him. I wonder if some readers were indifferent to the way the character bows to society’s cruel judgement of him, a judgement that he internalized. I chose this book because I wanted to read about Paris in the 1950s, and of course there is plenty of Paris atmosphere in the book, but it’s the ugly atmosphere of low-life bars and poverty.

In a 1956 review in the New York Times, I found little sympathy for the suffering of the narrator: “Much of the novel is laid in scenes of squalor, with a background of characters as grotesque and repulsive as any that can be found in Proust's ‘Cities of the Plain.’ But even as one is dismayed by Mr. Baldwin's materials, one rejoices in the skill with which he renders them.” (Granville Hicks, “Tormented Triangle,” NYT October 14, 1956)

The Dream is one of the twenty novels in Zola’s series titled Les Rougon-Macquart, published between 1871 and 1893. Each volume in the series highlights a character or a family that typify some aspect of French society in the second half of the 19th century in France. I’m enjoying The Dream, which is about the life of a young girl — an adopted orphan — in a town around 2 hours outside Paris: that is, two hours by the transportation that was available in the 19th century. The plot is slightly exaggerated with the angelic nature of the girl and her extreme religiosity, despite Zola’s famous antipathy to religion. She has a dream to marry a wealthy prince, and the book follows this as if it’s a fairy tale, not a story about an orphan taken in by a middle class couple. It’s lyrical (as the reviews all note) but I also feel a sense of irony in the much-too-happy plot.

I’ve only read a few of the novels in this amazing and fascinating series (maybe I’ve read six of them), and my ambition is to read more, as well as to read some of Zola’s other novels. I think I like his brutal realism better than this maybe fake idyl. 

And Watching…

Hitchcock Classic (1938)

Another Hitchcock classic but not quite as wonderful.  (1936)

All-around classic with Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon,
directed by Billy Wilder (1959)

…and my Favorite Classic



Blog post © 2025 mae sander

11 comments:

eileeninmd said...

I enjoy the old Hitchcock movies! Take care, have a wonderful day!

Deb Nance at Readerbuzz said...

I've read only three Zola books, but they were all very good. L'Assommoir was the first Zola, and it struck me as being gritty and deeply true. Germinal is the Zola book I read last summer. Tragic. That's the first word I think of when I think about that story and those characters.

David M. Gascoigne, said...

I suppose we all have our own definition of what is a classic, unless there is an objective standard unknown to me. I can think of many, but were I to choose but one book it would be “The Old Man and the Sea.” For music, probably Mozart’s Requiem.

Mae Travels said...

@David — I agree that there’s no exact definition of “classics.” And I definitely agree with your two choices. However, I think there are a lot of classics in film, literature, and music, not just a few. Films by Hitchcock and films with Marilyn Monroe always make people’s lists of classics.

David M. Gascoigne, said...

Never having been a fan of movies I am unable to comment. I saw one Hitchcock film and I can’t even remember the title, and I have never seen a Marilyn Monroe film. I suppose that film would encompass many genres and if that’s the case Jacques Cousteau’s “Le Monde du Silence” would do it for me.

My name is Erika. said...

I went through a Hitcchock phase, and I should get back to it. And Some Like It Hot is one of my favorite films. I'm reading a classic right now myself, a bit of Virginia Woolf. I haven't read anything by her in decades. Hope you didn't get too much snow. hugs-Erika

Jeanie said...

The last one cracks me up. That's what it felt like when we saw Mona too -- a whole bunch of folks with selfie sticks and no one really looking at the painting, just checking it off! I've been recording early Hitchcock movies off TCM lately. Now to watch them all!

Emma at Words And Peace / France Book Tours said...

Thanks for sharing your recent classics red. The Dream is actually a satire, as are many novels by Zola. But I like reading ti at the first level.
I recently rewatched The Lady Vanishes, but it still on my classic TBR!

Mae Travels said...

Yes, as I said, a great sense of irony. My sense of irony is especially triggered by the amazon.com categorization of the book as “ #8,841 in Christian Romance (Books) “

Debra Eliotseats said...

The Lady Vanishes brings back memories and a Hitchcock class in undergrad. :)

thecuecard said...

Giovanni's Room is quite powerful and Baldwin is on top of his game. Here's my review of it at: https://www.thecuecard.com/books/summer-on-the-run/