About This Book
Madame Bergeret abandons her marital home and returns to her mother's house amid provincial gossip and exacting social expectations. As she packs and moves, domestic episodes—a maid’s accidental fire, the husband’s quiet removal of furniture, petty appropriations of family items—unfold alongside her fanciful hopes for renewal and a better marriage. The narrative traces polite calls, circulating rumors, and everyday manoeuvres while offering satirical reflections on work, vanity, and bourgeois hypocrisy, showing how personal longing and imagined reinvention are constrained and shaped by communal judgment and the rituals of respectability.
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