The Wandering Jew, all  11 volumes in a single file, in English translation The Wandering Jew, all  11 volumes in a single file, in English translation

The Wandering Jew, all 11 volumes in a single file, in English translation

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According to Wikipedia: "Joseph Marie Eugène Sue (20 January 1804 – 3 August 1857) was a French novelist… His naval experiences supplied much of the materials of his first novels, Kernock le pirate (1830), Atar-Gull (1831), La Salamandre (2 vols., 1832), La Coucaratcha (4 vols., 1832-1834), and others, which were composed at the height of the Romantic movement of 1830. In the quasi-historical style he wrote Jean Cavalier, ou Les Fanatiques des Cevennes (4 vols., 1840) and Lautréaumont (2 vols., 1837). He was strongly affected by the Socialist ideas of the day, and these prompted his most famous works: Les Mystères de Paris (10 vols., 1842-1843) and Le Juif errant (tr. "The Wandering Jew") (10 vols., 1844-1845), which were among the most popular specimens of the roman-feuilleton. He followed these up with some singular and not very edifying books: Les Sept pêchés capitaux (16 vols., 1847-1849), which contained stories to illustrate each of the Seven Deadly Sins, Les Mystères du peuple (1849-1856), which was suppressed by the censor in 1857, and several others, all on a very large scale, though the number of volumes gives an exaggerated idea of their length. Some of his books, among them Le Juif Errant and the Mystères de Paris, were dramatized by himself, usually in collaboration with others. His period of greatest success and popularity coincided with that of Alexandre Dumas, père, with whom he has been compared. Sue has neither Dumas's wide range of subject, nor, above all, his faculty of conducting the story by means of lively dialogue; he has, however, a command of terror which Dumas seldom or never attained... Seven years after the publication of Sue's Les Mystères du peuple, a French revolutionary named Maurice Joly plagiarized aspects of the work for his anti-Napoleon III pamphlet, Dialogues in Hell between Machiavelli and Montesquieu, which in turn was later adapted by the Prussian Hermann Goedsche into an 1868 work entitled Biarritz, in which Goedsche substituted Jews for Sue's infernal Jesuit conspirators. Ultimately, this material became incorporated directly into the notorious anti-Semitic hoax, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion."

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2009
February 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
1,250
Pages
PUBLISHER
Eugène Süe
SELLER
Draft2Digital, LLC
SIZE
1.3
MB
Works of Eugène Sue Works of Eugène Sue
2013
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2017
100 Masterpieces you have to read before you die Vol: 1 (Golden Deer Classics) 100 Masterpieces you have to read before you die Vol: 1 (Golden Deer Classics)
2017
The Greatest Classics Ever Written The Greatest Classics Ever Written
2018
World's Greatest Classics in One Volume World's Greatest Classics in One Volume
2018
The Everlasting Masterpieces of World Literature in One Edition The Everlasting Masterpieces of World Literature in One Edition
2019
The Pocket Bible or Christian the Printer The Pocket Bible or Christian the Printer
1857
The Wandering Jew — Complete The Wandering Jew — Complete
1857
The Mysteries of Paris, Volume 1 of 6 The Mysteries of Paris, Volume 1 of 6
1857
The Blacksmith's Hammer, or The Peasant Code The Blacksmith's Hammer, or The Peasant Code
1857
Les mystères de Paris, Tome I Les mystères de Paris, Tome I
1857
The Mysteries of Paris, Volume 4 of 6 The Mysteries of Paris, Volume 4 of 6
1857