With an Introduction and
revised translation by Adrianne Tooke
Sentimental Education has been described both as the first modern novel
and as a novel to end all novels. Weaving a poignant love story into
his account of the 1848 revolution, Flaubert shows a society in the
grip of stereotypes, on every level. There is someting farcical in
his depiction of characters who aspire to act but are dogged by cliche
at every turn. To a greater extent even than Madame Bovary, Sentimental
Education is an indictment of modern consumerism, contrasting the hollowness
of material achievement with the lasting beauty of the ideal. Flaubert's
study of success and failure offers us a terrible sadness in a terrible
beauty, yet is one of the world's great comic masterpieces.