An astounding, even disturbing book! Since I recently read
Old Goriot (Classics) and afterwards
The Wild Ass's Skin: (La Peau de Chagrin) (Classics) I've become something of a Balzac-addict (not a Balzac-expert, I wouldn't dream of claiming that) and so it was with eager anticipation and high hopes that I began 'Cousin Bette'. Let me immediately state for the record that I wasn't disappointed in the least.
Using a relatively small cast of (main) characters, Balzac succeeds in depicting a whole host of passions and emotions, most of them the kind we like to attribute to others but are hesitant to acknowledge in ourselves, such as treachery, envy, jealousy, even hatred. The story in itself is simple and straightforward: Bette is the (poor) cousin of Adeline who married into money after meeting the (then young and dashing) Baron Hulot, and has depended on her relatives' goodwill and patronage ever since. Bette has secretly fallen in love with the Polish count Steinbock, and when Adeline's daughter Hortense captures his attention and subsequently marries him, that is the last straw for Bette. From that moment on she sets out to plot and deceive with the sole goal of ruining the entire Hulot-family. Does she succeed? Well, I urge you to find out for yourselves. In doing so you'll encounter a rich array of very lifelike characters, in a plot that moves along briskly, find yourself facing some serious (at times disturbing) dilemmas (such as 'What would I have done?'), and be treated to little nuggets of timeless insight into the human mind on virtually every page.
A real treat, as worthy of our attention today as it was upon its first publication in 1847!