Germinal
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
Émile Zola's Germinal (1885) is widely regarded as his masterpiece and one of the greatest novels in the French tradition — an unflinching epic of labour, hunger, and revolt set in the coalfields of northern France. The thirteenth novel of his vast Rougon-Macquart cycle, it was built on Zola's own descent into a working mine and his firsthand observation of a real miners' strike.
The young, out-of-work Étienne Lantier arrives in the bleak mining town of Montsou and takes a place at the pit called Le Voreux — a mine Zola renders as a living beast, crouching in the dark and devouring the men it swallows at dawn. Lodging with the Maheu family, three generations deep in the same shaft, Étienne learns the heat, the danger, and the falling wages, and he begins to dream of justice. When the Company cuts pay again, he leads the miners out on strike.
For a time the strike holds on hope and hunger; then it starves. The owners wait, soldiers arrive, the famished crowd erupts into violence, and the strike is crushed — sealed by catastrophe in the flooded pit. Étienne walks away beaten. Yet the title points beyond the defeat: Germinal, a spring month of the Revolutionary calendar, names the season of germinating seed, and the novel ends with the image of a buried army of workers slowly stirring toward a harvest still to come.
This edition presents the complete public-domain English translation by Havelock Ellis (1894) in clean, readable typesetting prepared for the modern e-reader, with an editor's foreword, a guide to further reading, and questions for reflection at the back.