Œuvres complètes de Guy de Maupassant - volume 11 by Guy de Maupassant

(6 User reviews)   1144
Maupassant, Guy de, 1850-1893 Maupassant, Guy de, 1850-1893
French
Hey, have you ever wondered what happens when people get exactly what they wish for? I just finished this collection of Maupassant's stories, and it's like a masterclass in that exact question. This isn't a single novel, but a bunch of short stories, and the best ones all circle around a simple, powerful idea: desire. A man inherits a fortune and finds it hollow. A woman gets the passionate affair she craves, only to discover the cost. A soldier achieves glory and is left with nothing but emptiness. Maupassant sets up these perfect, understandable human wants—for money, love, status—and then, with the cool precision of a surgeon, shows you what's really underneath. The main conflict isn't with another person; it's between the character's dream and the disappointing, often bitter, reality that follows. It's unsettling, brilliant, and will make you look at your own wishes a little differently. If you like stories that stick with you and make you think, grab this.
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This volume collects some of Guy de Maupassant's later short stories. Instead of one plot, you get a series of sharp, focused glimpses into different lives, usually in 19th-century France. We meet a range of characters: a clerk who suddenly becomes rich, a bourgeois wife chasing romance, a farmer obsessed with land, and soldiers dealing with the aftermath of war. Each story is a compact world, where Maupassant sets up a situation, lets a character pursue a powerful desire, and then reveals the consequences, which are rarely what anyone hoped for.

Why You Should Read It

Maupassant has this incredible ability to cut straight to the heart of human nature. His writing isn't flowery; it's clear, direct, and devastatingly effective. He doesn't judge his characters loudly, but by simply showing their actions and the results, he makes you feel the weight of every choice. The theme that ties these stories together is disillusionment. He shows how our passions—for wealth, for love, for recognition—can blind us and often lead to our own unhappiness. Reading these stories feels like having a very honest, slightly cynical friend point out the flaws in your best-laid plans. The characters feel real because their wants are so universal, which makes their downfalls or quiet despair that much more powerful.

Final Verdict

This collection is perfect for readers who love psychological realism and stories that pack a punch in a few pages. If you're a fan of authors like Anton Chekhov or Kate Chopin, you'll find a kindred spirit in Maupassant. It's also great for anyone who thinks classic literature has to be long and difficult; these stories are accessible, gripping, and over before you know it, but they leave a lasting impression. Just don't go in expecting happy endings. This is for readers who want to see the world, in all its beauty and bitterness, reflected back with unflinching clarity.

Sandra Nguyen
1 year ago

Five stars!

Robert Wright
2 months ago

A bit long but worth it.

Steven Davis
7 months ago

Wow.

Aiden Perez
1 week ago

The fonts used are very comfortable for long reading sessions.

Joseph Martinez
1 year ago

Very helpful, thanks.

4
4 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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