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Candide (Petits Classiques)
Candide (Petits Classiques)

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Author: Voltaire
Publisher: Larousse
Category: Book

Buy Used: £4.95



New (4) from £5.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 590248

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.4 x 0.4

ISBN: 2038717001
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
UPC: 046442717007
EAN: 9782038717006
ASIN: 2038717001

Publication Date: July 1998
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Mass Market Paperback - Candide
  • Paperback - Voltaire Candide Review
  • Paperback - Candide & Other Writings (Modern Library College Editions Series)
  • Paperback - Candide or Optimism (Classics)
  • Paperback - Candide (Clarendon French)
  • Paperback - Candide (Bedford Series in History & Culture)
  • Hardcover - Candide (Bedford Series in History and Culture)
  • Paperback - Candide (Bilingual Edition)
  • Paperback - Candide and Other Writings
  • Hardcover - Candide
  • Hardcover - Candide # (Modern Library (Hardcover))
  • Paperback - Candide (Keynotes)
  • Paperback - Candide
  • Hardcover - Candide
  • Paperback - Candide: A Dual-Language Book
  • Paperback - Candide (A Bantam classic)
  • Mass Market Paperback - Candide
  • Paperback - Candide
  • Turtleback - Candide
  • Paperback - Candide (French Texts)
  • Hardcover - Candide (Modern Library)
  • Paperback - Candide
  • Paperback - Candide
  • School & Library Binding - Candide (Bantam Classics)
  • Paperback - Candide
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  • Paperback - Candide [EasyRead Edition]
  • Paperback - Candide [EasyRead Comfort Edition]
  • Paperback - Candide [EasyRead Large Edition]
  • Paperback - Candide: [EasyRead Super Large 20pt Edition]
  • CD-ROM - Candide and Zadig
  • Hardcover - Candide
  • Paperback - Candide
  • Paperback - Candide (Large Print Edition)
  • Paperback - Candide: [EasyRead Super Large 18pt Edition]
  • Hardcover - Candide (Transaction Large Print)
  • Unknown Binding - Candide: And other writings
  • Paperback - Candide: And other writings
  • Hardcover - Candide (Twelve-Point Series)
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  • Hardcover - Voltair Canide
  • Hardcover - Candide (Konemann Classics)
  • Audio CD - Candide and Zadig (Naxos Complete Classics)
  • Paperback - Candide
  • Unknown Binding - Candide and Zadig
  • Hardcover - Candide And Other Writings (The Modern library of the world's best books [47.3])
  • Unknown Binding - Candide and Zadig (The Collected stories of the world's greatest writers)

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Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Delicious Irony Amidst Swift-Like Satire   September 14, 2007
Ever since philosophers began thinking about the meaning of life, a favorite question has been "Why do bad things happen to good people?". In Voltaire's day, this issue was primarily pursued either from the perspective of faith (everything that happens is God's will and must be for Divine purpose) or of reason (What do these events mean to you, as you interpret them subjectively?). Infuriated by the reaction by some members of the church to a horrible loss of life from an earthquake in Lisbon, Voltaire wrote this hard-biting satire of the human condition to explore these questions.

Before reading further, let me share a word of caution. This book is filled with human atrocities of the most gruesome sort. Anything that you can imagine could occur in war, an Inquisition, or during piracy happens in this book. If you find such matters distressing (as many will, and more should), this book will be unpleasant reading. You should find another book to read.

The book begins as Candide is raised in the household of a minor noble family in Westphalia, where he is educated by Dr. Pangloss, a student of metaphysical questions. Pangloss believes that this is the best of all possible worlds and deeply ingrains that view into his pupil. Candide is buoyed by that thought as he encounters many setbacks in the course of the book as he travels through many parts of Europe, Turkey, and South America.

All is well for Candide until he falls in love with the Baron's daughter and is caught kissing her hand by the Baron. The Baron immediately kicks Candide out of the castle (literally on the backside), and Candide's wanderings begin. Think of this as being like expulsion from the Garden of Eden for Adam. Soon the penniless Candide finds himself in the Bulgarian army, and receiving lots of beatings while he learns to drill.

The story grows more far-fetched with each subsequent incident. To the casual reader, this exaggeration can seem unnecessary and annoying. It will remind you of the most extreme parts of Swift in Gulliver's Travels and Rabelais in Gargantua and Pantagruel. But subtly, Voltaire is using the exaggeration to lure the reader into making complacent judgments about complacency itself that Voltaire wants to challenge. The result is a deliciously ironical work that undermines complacency at a more fundamental level than I have seen done elsewhere. Basically, Candide challenges any view you have about complacency that is defined in terms of the world-view of those who are complacent.

Significant changes of circumstances (good and ill) occur to all of the members of the Baron's household over the course of the story. Throughout, there is much comparing of who has had the worst luck, with much feeling sorry for oneself.

That is the surface story. Voltaire is, however, a master of misdirection. Beneath the surface, Voltaire has another purpose for the book. He also wants to expose the reader to questioning the many bad habits that people have that make matters worse for everyone. The major themes of these undercurrents are (1) competing rather than to cooperating, (2) employing inhumane means to accomplish worldly (and many spiritual) ends, (3) following expected rules of behavior to show one's superiority over others that harm and degrade others, (4) focusing on money and power rather than creating rich human relationships, (5) hypocritical behavior, and (6) pursuing ends that society approves of rather than ends that please oneself.

By the end of the story, the focus shifts again to a totally different question: How can humans achieve happiness? Then, you have to reassess what you thought about the book and what was going on in Voltaire's story. Many readers will choose to reread the book to better capture Voltaire's perspective on that final question, having been surprised by it.

Candide is one of my favorite books because it treats important philosophical questions in such an unusual way. Such unaccustomed matching of treatment and subject matters leaves an indelible impression that normal philosophical arguments can never match. Voltaire also has an amazing imagination. Few could concoct such a story (even by using illegal substances to stimulate the subconscious mind). I constantly find myself wondering what he will come up with next. The story is so absurd that it penetrates the consciousness at a very fundamental level, almost like doing improvisation. In so doing, Voltaire taps into that feeling of "what else can happen?" that overcomes us when we are at our most pessimistic. So, gradually you will find yourself identifying with the story -- even though nothing like this could ever happen to you. Like a good horror story, you are also relieved that you can read about others' troubles and can put your own into perspective. This last point is the fundamental humanity of the story. You see what a wonderful thing a kind word, a meal, or a helping hand can be. That will probably inspire you to offer those empathic actions more often.

After you have finished Candide, I suggest that you ask yourself where complacency about your life and circumstances is costing you and those you care about the potential for more health, happiness, peace, and prosperity. Then take Voltaire's solution, and look around you for those who enjoy the most of those four wonderful attributes. What do those people think and do differently from you?



5 out of 5 stars Delicious Irony Amidst Swift-Like Satire   May 18, 2004
 21 out of 23 found this review helpful

Ever since philosophers began thinking about the meaning of life, a favorite question has been "Why do bad things happen to good people?". In Voltaire's day, this issue was primarily pursued either from the perspective of faith (everything that happens is God's will and must be for Divine purpose) or of reason (What do these events mean to you, as you interpret them subjectively?). Infuriated by the reaction by some members of the church to a horrible loss of life from an earthquake in Lisbon, Voltaire wrote this hard-biting satire of the human condition to explore these questions.

Before reading further, let me share a word of caution. This book is filled with human atrocities of the most gruesome sort. Anything that you can imagine could occur in war, an Inquisition, or during piracy happens in this book. If you find such matters distressing (as many will, and more should), this book will be unpleasant reading. You should find another book to read.

The book begins as Candide is raised in the household of a minor noble family in Westphalia, where he is educated by Dr. Pangloss, a student of metaphysical questions. Pangloss believes that this is the best of all possible worlds and deeply ingrains that view into his pupil. Candide is buoyed by that thought as he encounters many setbacks in the course of the book as he travels through many parts of Europe, Turkey, and South America.

All is well for Candide until he falls in love with the Baron's daughter and is caught kissing her hand by the Baron. The Baron immediately kicks Candide out of the castle (literally on the backside), and Candide's wanderings begin. Think of this as being like expulsion from the Garden of Eden for Adam. Soon the penniless Candide finds himself in the Bulgarian army, and receiving lots of beatings while he learns to drill.

The story grows more far-fetched with each subsequent incident. To the casual reader, this exaggeration can seem unnecessary and annoying. It will remind you of the most extreme parts of Swift in Gulliver's Travels and Rabelais in Gargantua and Pantagruel. But subtly, Voltaire is using the exaggeration to lure the reader into making complacent judgments about complacency itself that Voltaire wants to challenge. The result is a deliciously ironical work that undermines complacency at a more fundamental level than I have seen done elsewhere. Basically, Candide challenges any view you have about complacency that is defined in terms of the world-view of those who are complacent.

Significant changes of circumstances (good and ill) occur to all of the members of the Baron's household over the course of the story. Throughout, there is much comparing of who has had the worst luck, with much feeling sorry for oneself.

That is the surface story. Voltaire is, however, a master of misdirection. Beneath the surface, Voltaire has another purpose for the book. He also wants to expose the reader to questioning the many bad habits that people have that make matters worse for everyone. The major themes of these undercurrents are (1) competing rather than to cooperating, (2) employing inhumane means to accomplish worldly (and many spiritual) ends, (3) following expected rules of behavior to show one's superiority over others that harm and degrade others, (4) focusing on money and power rather than creating rich human relationships, (5) hypocritical behavior, and (6) pursuing ends that society approves of rather than ends that please oneself.

By the end of the story, the focus shifts again to a totally different question: How can humans achieve happiness? Then, you have to reassess what you thought about the book and what was going on in Voltaire's story. Many readers will choose to reread the book to better capture Voltaire's perspective on that final question, having been surprised by it.

Candide is one of my favorite books because it treats important philosophical questions in such an unusual way. Such unaccustomed matching of treatment and subject matters leaves an indelible impression that normal philosophical arguments can never match. Voltaire also has an amazing imagination. Few could concoct such a story (even by using illegal substances to stimulate the subconscious mind). I constantly find myself wondering what he will come up with next. The story is so absurd that it penetrates the consciousness at a very fundamental level, almost like doing improvisation. In so doing, Voltaire taps into that feeling of "what else can happen?" that overcomes us when we are at our most pessimistic. So, gradually you will find yourself identifying with the story -- even though nothing like this could ever happen to you. Like a good horror story, you are also relieved that you can read about others' troubles and can put your own into perspective. This last point is the fundamental humanity of the story. You see what a wonderful thing a kind word, a meal, or a helping hand can be. That will probably inspire you to offer those empathic actions more often.

After you have finished Candide, I suggest that you ask yourself where complacency about your life and circumstances is costing you and those you care about the potential for more health, happiness, peace, and prosperity. Then take Voltaire's solution, and look around you for those who enjoy the most of those four wonderful attributes. What do those people think and do differently from you?


5 out of 5 stars A timeless lesson still unlearned by mankind   May 21, 2001
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

This neat, attractively-bound edition from Konemann combines Voltaire's Candide and the under-rated Zadig. Candide in particular should never be under-estimated, as relevant today as when it was written in the 18th century. Man's inhumanity to man, in the name of greed, religion, land or whatever is proof enough that we do not indeed live in "the best of all possible worlds" and through his sharp use of irony and satire, Voltaire convinces us without doubt. It should be compulsary for everyone to read Candide at least once during their lives, but it only improves with further reading.


4 out of 5 stars Candide by Voltaire is that good.   September 25, 1999
 5 out of 8 found this review helpful

Candide was a great satire and a good read. The adventures which befell the hero were well devised and written, and the fact that Candide would say "All is for the best, in the best of all possible worlds" at the most unopportune times was brillant. Altogether, the fact of the 1750's setting and the genius of Voltaire makes this story a must in my view.


3 out of 5 stars dissapointing   March 29, 1999
 2 out of 10 found this review helpful

I may have been expecting too much, but this book wasn't nearly as biting, clever or original as a dozen other satires i've read. That said, it has moments, and is entertaining.

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