The Discovery of France, Graham Robb
The Discovery of France, Graham Robb
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
Club: $14.99

The Discovery of France
A Historical Geography

Author: Graham Robb

Narrator: Derek Perkins

Unabridged: 14 hr 4 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 09/23/2020


Synopsis

A New York Times Notable Book, Publishers Weekly Best Book, Slate Best Book, and Booklist Editor's Choice

A narrative of exploration—full of strange landscapes and even stranger inhabitants—that explains the enduring fascination of France. While Gustave Eiffel was changing the skyline of Paris, large parts of France were still terra incognita. Even in the age of railways and newspapers, France was a land of ancient tribal divisions, prehistoric communication networks, and pre–Christian beliefs. French itself was a minority language.

Graham Robb describes that unknown world in arresting narrative detail. He recounts the epic journeys of mapmakers, scientists, soldiers, administrators, and intrepid tourists, of itinerant workers, pilgrims, and herdsmen with their millions of migratory domestic animals. We learn how France was explored, charted, and colonized, and how the imperial influence of Paris was gradually extended throughout a kingdom of isolated towns and villages.

The Discovery of France explains how the modern nation came to be and how poorly understood that nation still is today. Above all, it shows how much of France—past and present—remains to be discovered.

About Graham Robb

Bestselling author Graham Robb was born in Manchester in 1958 and is a former Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. He is an acclaimed historian and biographer, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and a Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. He has won the Whitbread Biography Prize and the Heinemann Award for Victor Hugo, as well as the Ondaatje Prize and Duff Cooper Prize for The Discovery of France. His book Parisians was a Sunday Times top ten bestseller. He lives on the Anglo-Scottish border.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Paula Koneazny on November 12, 2009

Francophile that I am, I will never see France quite the same way after having read Robb's fascinating historical geography (or geographical history)of France up to WWI. Almost every page, in fact, almost every paragraph proves chock-full of interesting "facts" and authorial observations. There are......more

Goodreads review by Kelly on May 22, 2016

This was fantastically fascinating and so just my thing. Review posted in roundup of fantastic books I've read in the last few months on my blog: [URL not allowed]......more

Goodreads review by Elizabeth on February 25, 2013

My deep love for France and the French is not based on deGaulle's France as a great nation but rather on its profound diversity of its language, culture, cuisine and mode de vie. Every region, every village, is unique because of its soil, what it grows, the history of its people. While the blender o......more

Goodreads review by Kirsten on May 15, 2024

It took me some time to finish this nonfictional book, all the while my rating going from 2 to 4 stars, but finally settling on 3. it is rewarding in places, a deep and knowledgeable study of French history and culture and politics, but it also seems to me to be condescending and patronizing towards......more

Goodreads review by Djewesbury on February 08, 2009

This is a fascinating book, full of the perfectly unexpected. It is possibly the best piece of social history I've ever read. The accepted version of modern French history relies on a linear story of gradual and natural centralisation: the organic creation of a nation conceived of, in its essential......more