The Shape of a City

Julien Gracq
3.93
110 ratings 10 reviews
Julien Gracq, the most important writer in France, is also the only living writer whose complete works appear in a volume of the prestigious Pleiades editions. The most original of his later works is this book about Nantes, which is Gracq’s personal and profound response to Proust’s synthesis of memory, reverie, and realism.The work begins with a quote from Baudelaire: “The shape of a city, as we all know, changes more quickly than the mortal heart.” The author writes of a child’s experience of the hierarchy of urban spaces: the radial avenues walked during school recreation periods, the districts between the axes, and the relationship to Nantes of those who lived there, including Breton and Rimbaud.
Genres: UrbanismLiteratureNonfictionFrance
216 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
35 (32%)
4 star
42 (38%)
3 star
26 (24%)
2 star
4 (4%)
1 star
3 (3%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Julien Gracq

Lists with this book

The Scapegoat
The Three Musketeers
The Club Dumas
France by Region: Loire Valley
80 books • 2 voters
How to Write
The Shape of a City
Summer in Algiers
Travel Writers
4 books • 1 voters
The L-Shaped Room
The Shape of Things to Come
Shapes in the Fire
'Shape' in titles
109 books • 4 voters