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Candide:

Or, Optimism
Front Cover
120 Reviews
Penguin, 1947 - Fiction - 144 pages

With its vibrant new translation, perceptive introduction, and witty packaging, this new edition of Voltaire's masterpiece belongs in the hands of every reader pondering our assumptions about human behavior and our place in the world. Candide tells of the hilarious adventures of the naïve Candide, who doggedly believes that “all is for the best” even when faced with injustice, suffering, and despair. Controversial and entertaining, Candide is a book that is vitally relevant today in our world pervaded by—as Candide would say—“the mania for insisting that all is well when all is by no means well.”

  • A Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition with French flaps and rough front
  • Completely new translation and introduction
  • Amazing cover art from one of the most beloved modern comic artists


@MoYoLawn Ever wonder how we get across the world so quickly in this book? Continental flies six times daily from Eldorado to Paris.

From Twitterature: The World's Greatest Books in Twenty Tweets or Less

  

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Review: Candide

User Review  - David - Goodreads

Published in 1759 as an attack on Liebnizian philosophy, full of footnotes explaining contemporary references to Jensenists, the Jesuits and the Theatines, "Candide" threatened to be a crashing bore ... Read full review

Review: Candide

User Review - Goodreads

This novella is highly satirical. Candide is apparently a victim of fortune as he roams from one part of the world to another. But Voltaire manages to endear him to us despite his flaws. He loves his ...

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Contents

INTRODUCTION
7
How Candide was brought up in a beautiful
19
in How Candide escaped from the Bulgars and what
25
Describing tempest shipwreck and earthquake
32
dide the Grand Inquisitor and the Jew
44
How Candide killed the brother of his beloved
65
What Candide and Martin discussed as they
94
Candides journey to Constantinople
128
woman once more
137
Copyright

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About the author (1947)

François-Marie Arouet, writing under the pseudonym Voltaire, was born in 1694 into a Parisian bourgeois family. Educated by Jesuits, he was an excellent pupil but one quickly enraged by dogma. An early rift with his father—who wished him to study law—led to his choice of letters as a career. Insinuating himself into court circles, he became notorious for lampoons on leading notables and was twice imprisoned in the Bastille.

By his mid-thirties his literary activities precipitated a four-year exile in England where he won the praise of Swift and Pope for his political tracts. His publication, three years later in France, of Lettres philosophiques sur les Anglais (1733)—an attack on French Church and State—forced him to flee again. For twenty years Voltaire lived chiefly away from Paris. In this, his most prolific period, he wrote such satirical tales as “Zadig” (1747) and “Candide” (1759). His old age at Ferney, outside Geneva, was made bright by his adopted daughter, “Belle et Bonne,” and marked by his intercessions in behalf of victims of political injustice. Sharp-witted and lean in his white wig, impatient with all appropriate rituals, he died in Paris in 1778—the foremost French author of his day.

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