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Saint Paul Trois Chateaux: 1948 by C. JoyBell C.

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Original Title: Saint Paul Trois Chateaux


ISBN: 1456437925
ISBN13: 9781456437923
Autor: C. JoyBell C. (Goodreads Author)
Rating: 5 of 5 stars (1689) counts
Original Format: Paperback, 140 pages
Download Format: PDF, FB2, DJVU, iBook.
Published: March 20th 2011 / by Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Language: English
Genre(s):
Romance >Contemporary Romance- 1 userHistorical Fiction- 1 userLiterature >20th Century- 1
user

Description:
There are those who say life is a pathway one paves with many things: time, space, questions,
answers, desires, fulfillment, and loss. They believe we carefully arrange each for cause and
consequence to give life order and structure. Life, however, provides an alternative outlook, where
it lays its elements according to its own will. The pavement is not carefully arranged; rather the
elements lay loosely, and in between them are the white spaces that we fill with joy, sorrow, and
the depth of what it means to be human. For Thibaut and Pierre-Auguste Desmarais, Lucy
Nightingberg's return visit for a night in Amaury Babin's pub La Place de St-Paul will bring their
individual paths into sharp relief. Over the course of one evening, memories, sudden recollections,
and immediate emotions give rise to passion, longing, and the unveiling of beclouded secrets, as a
delicate dance of fervent love and redemption roils. Unannounced glimpses into their pasts glue
pieces of the story together, and an understanding of the narrative in its entirety is constructed
from which a truth might be gleaned. A rich emotional tableau is the setting for an evening of love,
passion, atonement in C. JoyBell C.'s new novella. Full of extraordinary depth and a keen sense
for the primal needs of her disparate characters, her profound understanding of the human
condition is reminiscent of the classics Madame Bovary and Wuthering Heights. As past and
present collide, the author's focus on the universal and her fierce characterizations make this
modern update of classic romanticism succeed where many fail, utilizing the underlying human
experience to serve as a foundation to take a classic literary style and make it new. Though it is no
small feat capturing the aesthetic of modern drama while simultaneously retaining the depth of a
previous literary form, Saint Paul Trois Chateaux: 1948 accomplishes this task with ease and
aplomb, consistently delivering startling moments of emotion the likes of which are rare indeed."

About Author:

C. JoyBell C. is the most frequently quoted Author on Goodreads, is a leading female Thinker and
Writer in our world today, and is a Mentor to many modern-day Leaders, as well as an
Inspirational Figure to people from all walks of life. She has transformed the face of what it means
to be wise and knowledgable, giving life to a new image of the modern-day Renaissance Woman.
She is at the same time both timeless and youthful. The Author of various books on Soul Alchemy,
Esoterica, Poetry, Philosophy of Mind, Parenting and Fiction; she remains accessible to her
readers and in touch with her fans.
--
Also, you can follow me on Instagram: @cjoybellc I would be happy to see you there!

Other Editions:

- Saint Paul Trois Chteaux: 1948 (Kindle Edition)

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- Vade Mecum: (n.) a needed thing carried around everywhere; a useful


handbook or guidebook always kept on one's person; lit. "go with me"

- Wolves of the Sapphire Sun: This One's for the Wild Ones.

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Rewiews:

Dec 25, 2011


Herb Mallette
Rated it: really liked it
I was tempted to give this book five stars, but it's a literary work, and given that I don't typically
read literature, I hardly feel qualified to say there is no work within this one's category that exceeds
it. It impressed me, though, and that's my benchmark for a four-star book; that it rise above others
of its sort that I have read, and mark itself as a rarity.
Like its heroine, the story is capricious and mercurial, vaulting between emotions, times and even
tenses like a dancer in the most a
I was tempted to give this book five stars, but it's a literary work, and given that I don't typically
read literature, I hardly feel qualified to say there is no work within this one's category that exceeds
it. It impressed me, though, and that's my benchmark for a four-star book; that it rise above others
of its sort that I have read, and mark itself as a rarity.
Like its heroine, the story is capricious and mercurial, vaulting between emotions, times and even
tenses like a dancer in the most acrobatic of ballets, a lithe, elegant form delirious with passion
and expressive impulse. If you told me that the entire thing had been written in a single sitting, in
some mad, 36-hour compulsion that left its author's tendons inflamed and fingers near paralytic
with cramps, I would believe you. And if you told me that it had been written over the course of ten
years abroad researching every detail of the setting, then meticulously drafting and redrafting and
editing each turn of phrase to achieve an impression of reckless spontaneity, I would also believe
you. This work either flowed from its author in a cascade of emotion and vitality, or has been
precisely crafted to produce that effect. In either case, it left me convinced that C. JoyBell C. is a
person wildly alive, struck through with wonderment and awe at the world around us, and intent on
communicating those sensations with the rest of humanity.
In Lucy, the author has managed to invest seemingly the entire catalogue of delightful female
mannerisms and a spectrum of moods no less bright or fluid than the rays from a prism that might
wash across the wave-tossed deck of a ship at sea, if some student of optics were to hold it aloft
in demonstration to his fellow passengers. And this despite the fact that the story itself is mostly
dark and night-bound, full of tempest-tossed moments that tell us how it feels to be cold and
drenched and muddied, both inside and out.
It's a conversational story, in its structure and also in its ambitions. The present action consists
almost entirely of two people talking, although their omissions are by and large as important as the
words that they speak. But in making us guess and wonder and fill in a great many gaps, the
author seems to want to engage the reader in a dialogue -- to make the reader a part of these
discussions, with their turmoil of expression and repression, their mysteriously veering and
ricocheting passions.
I was thoroughly mesmerized by "Saint Paul Trois Chatueax," and had circumstances permitted,
would likely have read it all at one stretch. I hope that the author's life is as vibrant as this work
makes Life seem.
3 likes

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