Tu as t bon et g n reux envers moi, je le sais; lu me combles de soins, tu me couvres de pierreries, tu m'accables de ton luxe et de ta magnificence; sans toi je serais morte dans quelque h pital... This description may be from another edition of this product.
I was inspired to read this novel because of having recently seen the film "Children of the Century" (1999) about the lives of George Sand and Alfred de Musset. Much of the film is set in exotic Venice, and after the film ended, I wanted to learn still more about this pair of lovers, perhaps through a novel or an autobiographical work one of them had written. I chose "Leone Leoni" because it was easily available -- unlike "Lui et Elle" and "Elle et Lui," written by Alfred de Musset and George Sand, respectively, about their relationship to one another. What a lovely surprise to find that the setting for "Leone Leoni" is also largely set in Venice, exactly like the lavish 1999 film. Equally surprising, the character of Leone Leoni bears a striking resemblance to the character of Alfred de Musset depicted in the film as well. While I have little biographical material at hand to rely on, I do know that George Sand wrote "Leone Leoni" within one year of first meeting Alfred de Musset. In the novel Leone Leoni is seen as both noble and a card-sharp, aristocratic and deceitful by everyone who encounters him. The story is about Juliette's discovery of his character and her fatal, magnetic attraction to him despite his knavery. George Sand can really whip up an emotional storm of passion and narration that leads the reader into a journey with many sharp curves, only some of which can be predictably seen just up ahead, leaving the reader mostly astounded and surprised by what befalls the heroine and the anti-hero, Leone Leoni. Even more surprising, I noticed here in Sand's work a motif borrowed from Marquis de Sade's stories: malevolence cannot be countered by goodness or honor (though love, in this story, is equally as strong). The narrator is Bustamente, a lover and friend of Juliette, who listens to her tell her story about her desperate and passionate encounters with Leone Leoni from the beginning to the point where Bustamente finds her in terrible straits, all alone, nearly mad, and in need of rescue. It strains the modern reader's credulity a bit that Juliette can remember every single conversation she ever heard even while in states of half-sleep or trauma, the contents of every letter, the names of everyone she met, including the servants, over a period of years. But this straining at credulity was the only flaw I found in George Sand's otherwise powerful, narcotic-like tale of romantic immorality. "No woman has ever loved a man for his good character. She may respect him, admire him, be fond of him, but he is never the man for whom she will toss her bonnet over the windmills of the world." - "The Hussy's Handbook" (1942), Helen Brown Norden
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