Eline Vere 
The story of Eline Vere, the name of our heroine, is a romantic tragedy set in the late 1800s. If you enjoy novels by authors such as Jane Austen you will also love Elines world.Eline is beautiful, flirtatious but also intelligent. She wonders why men fall down at her feet just for her smile whereas it is really hard work to make women like her.The stifling provincial society of The Hague makes her feel uncomfortable although she doesnt quite know how to express this. She has a love-hate
Basically a slow burner about the wealthy and bored, turn-of-the century patricians with too much time on their hands. Eline Vere is a young lady who images she's cut out for great things, cannot abide mediocracy and in the end burns out completely, insane and hooked on morphine.Yes, it's a modern book, and he who enters here finds no heroes, nothing to look up to. There's always something interesting going on to make it worthwhile, though, for example, the way Couperus' works with the common

When I moved back to The Hague I thought it was high time to finally read the Dutch classis Eline Vere. After getting used to the archaic language I absolutely loved it. Since I now live in The Hague I also took the opportunity to visit the Couperus museum and do the Couperus literary walk on the "Literaire Routes" app provided by the Literatuurmuseum. Let me take you along:The Couperus Museum displays Couperus' desk with some original ornaments.The tour starts in the Surinamestraat where
I am pretty much always going on about the lack of real classics of Dutch literature. Louis Couperus's 'Eline Vere' is probably as close as it gets, even though it does borrow heavily from the Russian tradition of realist novels, and Anna Karenina in particular. Luckily though, 'Eline Vere' does manage to establish itself as a well-balanced and ultimately independent novel which is mainly about melancholy, desire and morality.It does take some getting used to. The high society of Den Haag is a
I read the version put out by Archipelago Books. It was a lovely book to hold. I really enjoyed its comfortable heft, the binding, the font, the overall design and texture of the cover. It may have been about the stodgier side of the Hague in the 19th century, but the book itself was a sensual delight. Every time I turned a page, I enjoyed touching the paper it was printed on. This was very fitting since there is a lot of material culture in it. There was a sameness to what people said; the
shook
Louis Couperus
ebook | Pages: 568 pages Rating: 3.73 | 2098 Users | 102 Reviews

Present Epithetical Books Eline Vere
Title | : | Eline Vere |
Author | : | Louis Couperus |
Book Format | : | ebook |
Book Edition | : | P.N. van Kampen & Zoon (1890) |
Pages | : | Pages: 568 pages |
Published | : | 2007 by Dbnl.org (first published 1889) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Classics. European Literature. Dutch Literature. Literature |
Rendition Toward Books Eline Vere
Eline Vere is a passionate and rebellious young socialite, living in The Hague in the late 19th century. Driven by a highly active imagination, she attempts to escape the narrow confines of her bourgeois existence, and to force reality to live up to her dreams - but the world has other plans. In Eline Vere, with its fascinating heroine and supporting cast of her female friends and relatives, Couperus minutely and vividly evokes the characters, conventions, manners and hypocrisies of Dutch society in 1889 - and yet engages with topics that are generally debated to this day.Point Books As Eline Vere
Original Title: | Eline Vere |
Edition Language: | Dutch URL http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/coup002elin01_01/ |
Literary Awards: | BTBA Best Translated Book Award Nominee for Fiction longlist (2011) |
Rating Epithetical Books Eline Vere
Ratings: 3.73 From 2098 Users | 102 ReviewsJudgment Epithetical Books Eline Vere
The greatest 19th century novelist youve never heard of!What if you combined the socially and the psychologically complex world of the rich as examined by Henry James and Marcel Proust, the aesthetic sensibilities of Oscar Wilde, and the subtle political astuteness of Joseph Conrad, and combined them all in one novelist? Welcome to world of Louis Couperus. Couperus was Hollands great novelist in the late 19th and early 20th century, but is almost unknown here. His novels have been slowlyThe story of Eline Vere, the name of our heroine, is a romantic tragedy set in the late 1800s. If you enjoy novels by authors such as Jane Austen you will also love Elines world.Eline is beautiful, flirtatious but also intelligent. She wonders why men fall down at her feet just for her smile whereas it is really hard work to make women like her.The stifling provincial society of The Hague makes her feel uncomfortable although she doesnt quite know how to express this. She has a love-hate
Basically a slow burner about the wealthy and bored, turn-of-the century patricians with too much time on their hands. Eline Vere is a young lady who images she's cut out for great things, cannot abide mediocracy and in the end burns out completely, insane and hooked on morphine.Yes, it's a modern book, and he who enters here finds no heroes, nothing to look up to. There's always something interesting going on to make it worthwhile, though, for example, the way Couperus' works with the common

When I moved back to The Hague I thought it was high time to finally read the Dutch classis Eline Vere. After getting used to the archaic language I absolutely loved it. Since I now live in The Hague I also took the opportunity to visit the Couperus museum and do the Couperus literary walk on the "Literaire Routes" app provided by the Literatuurmuseum. Let me take you along:The Couperus Museum displays Couperus' desk with some original ornaments.The tour starts in the Surinamestraat where
I am pretty much always going on about the lack of real classics of Dutch literature. Louis Couperus's 'Eline Vere' is probably as close as it gets, even though it does borrow heavily from the Russian tradition of realist novels, and Anna Karenina in particular. Luckily though, 'Eline Vere' does manage to establish itself as a well-balanced and ultimately independent novel which is mainly about melancholy, desire and morality.It does take some getting used to. The high society of Den Haag is a
I read the version put out by Archipelago Books. It was a lovely book to hold. I really enjoyed its comfortable heft, the binding, the font, the overall design and texture of the cover. It may have been about the stodgier side of the Hague in the 19th century, but the book itself was a sensual delight. Every time I turned a page, I enjoyed touching the paper it was printed on. This was very fitting since there is a lot of material culture in it. There was a sameness to what people said; the
shook
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