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Les Hommes de bonne volonté (4 volumes) #1

Les Hommes de bonne volonté, tome 1

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Conçus par Jules Romains comme la synthèse ambitieuse et multiforme de vingt-cinq années de vie française entre 1908 et 1933, Les Hommes de bonne volonté constituent l'un des ensembles romanesques majeurs de notre temps. De très nombreuses destinées, entrecroisées ou parallèles, animent, au cours d'aventures tragiques ou légères, sentimentales ou comiques, ce tableau panoramique d'une époque confrontée à une page capitale de son histoire : Louis Bastide, l'enfant de Montmartre au cerceau enchanté ; le délicieux chien Macaire, découvrant à ras de terre un Paris insolite ; Quinette, le relieur criminel plongé dans la fatalité de ses entreprises ; le parlementaire idéaliste Gurau, qui affronte les financiers sans scrupules du Cartel pétrolier et les coquetteries de la jolie Germaine Baader ; Haverkamp, l'affairiste, à qui la création d'une station thermale prépare un destin hors du commun ; les deux normaliens : Jallez, dont le récit des amours enfantines avec la jeune Hélène trace une poétique description de Paris ; Jerphanion, que le rêve d'une société débarrassée de ses féodalités n'empêche pas de conquérir le cœur d'une petite modiste, Jeanne. D'autres encore : Laulerque et Clanricard, les instituteurs, qui partagent avec Sampeyre, leur maître en " bonne volonté ", l'espoir d'un monde pacifié... Par son tournoiement maîtrisé de personnages aussi divers qu'attachants, le vaste roman de la maturité de Jules Romains demeure un témoignage inégalé sur les songes, les tourments et les aspirations d'une génération.

Contient les 7 premiers livres :
1. Le 6 octobre
2. Crime de Quinette
3. Les amours enfantins
4. Éros de Paris
5. Les superbes
6. Les humbles
7. Recherche d'une église

1240 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1934

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About the author

Jules Romains

457 books35 followers
Jules Romains, born Louis Henri Jean Farigoule (August 26, 1885 - August 14, 1972), was a French poet and writer and the founder of the Unanimism literary movement. His works include the play Knock ou le Triomphe de la médecine, and a cycle of works called Les Hommes de bonne volonté (Men of Good Will).

Jules Romain was born in Saint-Julien-Chapteuil in the Haute-Loire but went to Paris to attend first the lycée Condorcet and then the prestigious École normale supérieure. He was close to the Abbaye de Créteil, a utopian group founded in 1906 by Charles Vildrac and René Arcos, which brought together, among others, the writer Georges Duhamel, the painter Albert Gleizes and the musician Albert Doyen. He received his agrégation in philosophy in 1909.

In 1927, he signed a petition (that appeared in the magazine Europe on April 15) against the law on the general organization of the nation in time of war, abrogating all intellectual independence and all freedom of expression. His name on the petition appeared with those of Lucien Descaves, Louis Guilloux, Henry Poulaille, Séverine... and those of the young Raymond Aron and Jean-Paul Sartre from the École normale supérieure.

During World War II he went into exile first to the United States where he spoke on the radio through the Voice of America and then, beginning in 1941, to Mexico where he participated with other French refugees in founding the Institut Français d'Amérique Latine (IFAL).

A writer on many varied topics, Jules Romain was elected to the Académie Française in 1946, occupying chair 12 (among the 40 chairs in that august academy). In 1964, Jules Romains was named citizen of honor of Saint-Avertin. Following his death in Paris in 1972, his place, chair 12, in the Académie Française was taken by Jean d'Ormesson.

Jules Romains is remembered today, among other things, for his concept of Unanimism and his cycle of 27 novels in Les Hommes de bonne volonté (The Men of Good Will), a remarkable literary fresco depicting the odyssey over a quarter century of two friends, the writer Jallez and politician Jerphanion, who provide an example in literature of Unanimism.

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