The Black Tulip
by Alexandre Dumas (p#x000E8;re), David Coward (Editor), Franz Demmler (Translator)
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9780191611254
- Publisher: OUP Oxford
- Publication date: 06/01/2000
- Series: Oxford World's Classics Series
- Sold by: Barnes & Noble
- Format: eBook
- File size: 2 MB
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
- Share
- LendMe LendMe™ Learn More
Alexandre Dumas's novels are notable for their suspense and excitement, their foul deeds, hairsbreadth escapes, and glorious victories. In The Black Tulip (1850), the shortest of Dumas's most famous tales, the real hero is no Musketeer, but a flower. The novel - a deceptively simple story - is set in Holland in 1672, and weaves the historical events surrounding the brutal murder of John de Witte and his brother Cornelius into a tale of romantic love. The novel is also a
timeless political allegory in which Dumas, drawing on the violence and crimes of history, makes his case against tyranny and puts all his energies into creating a symbol of justice and tolerance: the fateful tulipa negra.
This new edition reprints the first, classic English translation. David Coward sets the novel in the context of its author's life, the turbulent history of the Dutch Republic, and the amazing 'tulipmania' of the seventeenth century which brought wealth to some and ruin to many. - ;Alexandre Dumas's novels are notable for their suspense and excitement, their foul deeds, hairsbreadth escapes, and glorious victories. In The Black Tulip (1850), the shortest of Dumas's most famous tales, the real hero is no Musketeer, but a flower. The novel - a deceptively simple story - is set in Holland in 1672, and weaves the historical events surrounding the brutal murder of John de Witte and his brother Cornelius into a tale of romantic love. The novel is also a
timeless political allegory in which Dumas, drawing on the violence and crimes of history, makes his case against tyranny and puts all his energies into creating a symbol of justice and tolerance: the fateful tulipa negra.
This new edition reprints the first, classic English translation. David Coward sets the novel in the context of its author's life, the turbulent history of the Dutch Republic, and the amazing 'tulipmania' of the seventeenth century which brought wealth to some and ruin to many. -
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Twenty Years After
- by Alexandre Dumas
-
- The Hunchback of Notre Dame:…
- by Victor HugoIsabel F. Hapgood
-
- Far from the Madding Crowd
- by Thomas Hardy
-
- The Mysteries of Udolpho: A…
- by Ann Radcliffe
-
- Daniel Deronda
- by George Eliot
-
- Pride and Prejudice
- by Jane Austen
-
- A Hunter's Sketches
- by Ivan S. Turgenev
-
- Barchester Towers
- by Anthony Trollope
-
- The Way We Live Now
- by Anthony Trollope
-
- Bleak House
- by Charles Dickens
-
- Jude the Obscure
- by Thomas Hardy
-
- The Man in the Iron Mask
- by Alexandre Dumas (p#x000E8;re)David Coward
-
- The Mayor of Casterbridge
- by Thomas Hardy
-
- The Italian: Or the…
- by Ann Radcliffe
-
- On Forsyte 'Change
- by John Galsworthy