Reviews of Madame Bovary (Bantam Classics) by Gustave Flaubert (ISBN:0553213415) | weRead
 
This version of the book has been reviewed in English(557), French(7), Spanish(1), Polish(1), German(1) by readers.   
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Reviews of Madame Bovary (Bantam Classics) - Page 1 of 57
Grace posted a review at 2009-11-16 21:06:19. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I first heard of Madame Bovary when I saw an an for a play of the same name in Shanghai. Flaubert's portrayal of Mdm Bovary's life after marriage is both sympathetic but also realistic and tragic. The boredom of domestic life drives Mdm Bovary to 2 affairs which eventually not only led to her own ruin but also that of her husband and daughter. The story created an uproar when it was first published in France, and poses an apt warning for addicts of consumerism of today. A sobering read.
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A reader posted a review at 2009-10-26 15:49:52. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Melodrama
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A reader posted a review at 2009-10-14 16:09:56. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Emma Bovary was completely self absorbed in what the fantasy of love should be while letting her family life deteriorate slowly for her own pleasures. Charles was a very weak man he let everyone control him especially his wife. What I didn’t like is the writer spent lots of time on the characters and places which is all well but I think a little more description of the relationship between Emma and Charles would have been much better. By the end of the book I was tired of hearing any thing that character Homais had to say he was a pompous and arrogant know it all. I have heard a lot about the translation making this a hard read that wasn’t the case for me it was the lengthy moments he spent on situations that did not have any impact on the main characters Emma & Charles. The book ended disastrously for the daughter which made me feel even more contempt for Emma’s character as well as Charles at least he could have tried to live for his daughter she was the real victim in this story.
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Marcel posted a review at 2009-10-08 13:06:54. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Comments above give good examples of the kind of small details that can create a character in the reader's mind with an economy of effort. One doesn't have to repeat such things throughout a novel to get the point across. Such minor delineations of character -- remember the maxim "action is character" -- are often worth ten thousand physical descriptions. And these characters aren't wildly quirky in the gonzo sense -- precise observations of small (but character-revealing) observations are excellent. These are WRITERLY observations of a very high order. Just as becoming an artist demands a new way of SEEING (such as seeing negative space), so does becoming a writer demand a new and more careful way of OBSERVING (such as plucking a very few revealing character traits from the overwhelming penetralium of mystery that is human behavior -- i.e. the glasses stems, once or twice remarked upon, which a later character observes to have been well-chewed. This is, to cite an obscure reference I won't elaborate on, Madame Bovary's umbrella all over again). ADA is a revelation. Read it and explain to me why it and he didn't win a World Fantasy Award. Actually, I also find much of Nabokov's short fiction among the best there is. (Beware the Vine Sisters!) And his teaching notes to such novels as MADAME BOVARY and BLEAK HOUSE are also in print. In Vladimir Nabokov's wonderful introduction to his lecture notes for MADAME BOVARY (and also for Austen's MANSFIELD PARK, Joyce's ULYSSES, Stevenson's DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, Kafka's METAMORPHOSIS, and Dickens's BLEAK HOUSE), VN talks about the "good reader" and says that he or she cannot be too much the slave to imagination and feeling and the wish to feel (ala Emma Bovary) nor too much the objective scientist, but rather a dynamic blend of both. And the same must be true, I think, for the writer -- or as Nabokov says of the great writers -- "Part teacher, part scientist, part enchanter." I don't believe there's a single "sympathetic character" in Flaubert's MADAME BOVARY -- we want to root for Emma, but she's such a selfish, shallow, self-destructive idiot that it's very hard to identify or root for her in any terms of "sympathizing" -- but the writing is so incredibly powerful that generation after generation of readers find Emma Bovary and her literally sordid tale unforgettable. What a silly question. "Lethal cocktail" -- what a foul euphemism. Why enrich pharmaceutical companies, Obama's bane, when good old rat poison is so cheaply and universally available? Have you not read Madame Bovary, sir? That was a fine death . . . and physician attended! Is anybody interested in these films? Cate Blanchett in The Good German, which apparently is Soderbergh's homage to noir in general and The Third Man in specific. Factory Girl, which is the Edie Sedgwick story, basically. I must confess to a perverse curiosity about Guy's Pearce's performance as Andy Warhol. Todd Fields' Little Children. I actually have seen this one, and cannot recommend it. Even if you liked American Beauty, this melodrama about suburbia gone bad is, except for Kate Winslet's performance as Sarah, excessive. I really liked Fields as an actor (he was in Ashley Judd's one good movie. Ruby in Paradise), and coming out of indie film, I had hopes for him. But In the Bedroom didn't do much for me and in this...well, he does deliver a film full of beautiful images, but this story about suburban moms who gather in a park and talk about men etc is dreadfully overcooked. Winslet's Sarah is supposed to be a dowdy housewife (she looks absolutely gorgeous, even though she dresses the part) doesn't fit in with the other wives, a situation made clear when she defends Emma Bovary at her book club and is told that Emma is "a slut." She initiates an affair wit Brad, who's called "The Prom King" by the other wives, a hunky idiot married to Jennifer Connely (in an utterly thankless role). Eventually judgment is rendered courtesy of a creepy Deus ex child molester. Just as in American beauty judgment comes in the form of a gay marine. It's all so very Puritanical. And ridiculous. And just bad. But Winslet is pretty damn good. There's been very little talk of Thomas Pynchon, but also no discussion of William Gaddis, of Proust, of Flaubert's novels outside of Madame Bovary, of Don DeLillo's astounding work, of the shocking originality of Flannery O'Connor or Walker Percy or Jose Saramago or Philip Roth. MADAME BOVARY -- don't read it for the first time or re-read it in the same week that you're looking at THE GREAT GATSBY. Your head will explode. We could apply the question to Flaubert. By choosing a bourgeois topic and banal bourgeois characters in MADAME BOVARY, he poured the fullness of his talent into a slender vessel . . . but Emma Bovary still reaches out to us as a human being, however provincial and flawed. The result of Flaubert's deliberate restrictions upon himself seems to produce a powerful -- perhaps not totally intended -- synergy. But in his later novels Flaubert worked harder on literally "writing about nothing" and thus depending most heavily upon irony as a constant thread -- a precursor to our modern literary age, of course -- but also an effort in which, even when he succeeds, he leaves us in awe of the prose but with little or no attachment to the people in the tale.
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A reader posted a review at 2009-10-05 15:26:24. (Language: English)
didnit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I realize I probably shouldn't admit to this, but I absolutely hated this book. Emma Bovary is a self-absorbed, stuck up, hideously annoying main character, and most of the time I found myself wanting to reach into the book, grab her by the neck and shake her. The only even slightly loveable character, Emma's husband, Charles, who is loving, kind and goes out of his way to make his impossible wife happy, ends up dying of sorrow. The whole book is an endless tragic affair, of course, so it is to be expected that the characters all end up miserable (most of them, anyway), which usually isn't something that bothers me, but in Madam Bovary there just wasn't anything interesting enough to make me care about them. Most of the book is made up of eternally long, descriptive paragraphs. There is little dialogue and little character development. Flaubert definitely isn't for me.
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Zsolt posted a review at 2009-09-24 22:44:57. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I remember loving the rhythm of the sentences of the first chapters. Ahh, the provincial life, the panic on the streets of Carlslie...
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A reader posted a review at 2009-09-20 19:33:31. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 The combination of characters with completely different personality is really funny even though their psychology seems very realistic. I really met people for each characters. I am certainly myself Homais.
Moreover, to ridicule the tragedy of love is really something that I apreciate.
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A reader posted a review at 2009-09-15 10:13:20. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Classic... great book!
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A reader posted a review at 2009-09-14 11:30:48. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I enojoyed every page. I could picture every sapace, every feeling. I understood Emma, and heated her, so much!!! ugggg...it was just great! The escence of this book comes to my mind every day!
I didn´t like it, to slow, to descriptive..yo male!
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Bill posted a review at 2009-09-12 21:21:28. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I enjoyed this book, because I enjoy a good Dramatic Tragedy. It seems some people who reviewed this expected a tale of Heroism, which it is not.

The book is layered with subtlety, and I was intrigued by his distinctions between temptation, corruption, and delusion.

Considering when it was written, the book is fascinating and most readers will probably gain more from the story by reading it multiple times. But I did not find the first half of the book engaging, and as a result will not read it again, as there are plenty of books that are engaging throughout the entirety of the storyline.

Additionally, I was disappointed that weRead recommended it after I indicated that I liked Zola. The two writers are completely different and Flaubert openly criticizes him in this novel.

Book is also available from www.feedbooks.com
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Reviews of Madame Bovary (Bantam Classics) - Page 1 of 57
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