Francesca Penchant's Blog
December 15, 2024
Top 5 Decadent Roman Emperors

Many years ago, my parents and I marveled at the Roman emperors depicted on the award-winning BBC television drama I, Claudius (1976), based on Robert Graves’s novel of the same name and re-aired by PBS in the eighties. Oh, how naive we were in those halcyon days of 1986 BT.
Nowadays, I still revel in imperial SPQR outrageousness by reading such books as Mary Beard’s Emperor of Rome and The Dedalus Book of Roman Decadence: Emperors of Debauchery. In fact, ...
November 1, 2024
Top 5 Decadent Novels

Often I am asked to cite my “Top Ten” classic French decadent novels—at least I wish I were. In preparation for that day, I have compiled a definitive list in chronological order. There are countless decadent novels, but these are the ones that I have read and enjoyed multiple times, and expect to appreciate even more as time goes on.

Dangerous Liaisons (Les Liaisons dangereuses)
Chod...
October 4, 2024
Infinite Mysteries

Here are five decadent things worth sharing:
Word of the Week

arcana (noun)
singular ar·ca·num är-ˈkā-nəm
plural arcana är-ˈkā-nə
a: mysterious or specialized knowledge, language, or information accessible or possessed only by the initiate—usually used in plural
b: elixir
Little by little, the arcana of this art, the most neglected of all, had been revealed to Des Esseintes, who could now decipher its languag...
September 6, 2024
Benighted Travelers

Here are five decadent things worth sharing:
Word of the Week

benighted (noun)
be·night·ed, bē-
(adjective)
a. overtaken by darkness or night
Benighted travelers, from markets and from fairs, have seen his midnight candle glimmering. —W. B. Yeats (1928)
b. existing in a state of intellectual, moral, or social darkness

Carlo Gesualdo (1566–1613) was an Ital...
August 2, 2024
Grotesqueries

Here are five decadent things worth sharing:

grotesquerie (noun)
grō-ˈte-skə-rē
: something that is grotesque: fanciful, bizarre, or incongruous. Something departing markedly from the natural, the expected, or the typical. Example sentence: Born Joseph Merrick, the so-called Elephant Man was exhibited as a sideshow grotesquerie.
Contes cruels (cruel tales) are stories that focus on the dark side of human behavior—on aberrant bodie...
July 5, 2024
Slightly Disreputable in an Attractive Manner

Here are five decadent things worth sharing:
Word of the Week

louche
ˈlüsh
(adjective)
a. Of questionable taste or morality; decadent
b. Not reputable or decent
c. Unconventional and slightly disreputable in an attractive manner; raffish, rakish
Why do we remember the witty and glamorous Wilde, and forget the Machiavellia...
June 7, 2024
Street Haunting

Here are five decadent things worth sharing:
Word of the Week

flaneuse (noun)
fla-¦nərz, -¦nə̄z
: a woman who is or who behaves like a flaneur, an idle man-about-town
Example sentence: Flaneuse Virginia Woolf wrote about walking through London in her 1927 essay "Street Haunting.”
Speaking of flaneuses, the book Flâneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Ven...
May 24, 2024
Rachilde, Homme de Lettres

Here are five decadent things worth sharing:
Word of the Week

dandiacal (adjective)
dan-ˈdī-ə-kəl
: of, relating to, or suggestive of a dandy
Example sentence: Florian was a dandiacal man-about-town.
Speaking of dandies, the most famous dandy is Beau Brummel (1778–1840). Known for his minimal and immaculate uniform of a white shirt, navy coat, and tan trousers, he ended his days poor and friendless in France (where scandalized Engl...