Les Français peints par eux-mêmes, tome 2 by L. Curmer

(16 User reviews)   5928
By Helen Allen Posted on Jan 2, 2026
In Category - Child Development
French
Okay, so you know those Instagram accounts that try to show you 'a day in the life' of someone? Imagine that, but for 1840s France, and done with incredible wit and detail. 'Les Français peints par eux-mêmes' isn't a novel—it's a massive, illustrated social portrait. Volume 2 is like opening a time capsule filled with caricatures and essays on everyone from the grumpy concierge guarding her building to the flamboyant dandy strolling the boulevards. The 'mystery' it solves is the simple, brilliant one of everyday life. What did people worry about, laugh at, and pretend to be back then? This book shows you, not through dry history, but through the vibrant, slightly gossipy lens of the people living it. It's anthropology before it was cool.
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Forget a single plot. This book is a crowd. Les Français peints par eux-mêmes (The French Painted by Themselves) is a famous 19th-century publication, and this second volume is a continuation of its mission: to document, in almost encyclopedic fashion, the social types of the era. Through a series of short, illustrated chapters, each one focuses on a different character from Parisian and provincial life.

The Story

There's no main character. Instead, you meet a parade of them. You'll get a chapter on the ‘Journalist’, buzzing from café to printing house, followed by one on the ‘Provincial Lady’ with her very different set of worries. There's the shrewd ‘Shopkeeper’, the melancholic ‘Bachelor’, the ever-complaining ‘Renter’. Each sketch combines a detailed, often funny illustration with a written piece that describes their habits, their clothes, their ambitions, and their flaws. It's not a story with a beginning and end, but a panoramic snapshot of a society in all its bustling, contradictory glory.

Why You Should Read It

The magic is in the specifics. This isn't a historian telling you "the middle class grew." It's showing you the exact pattern on a clerk's waistcoat and the precise way he tries to hide a hole in his glove. The writing has a wink to it—these are observations made by people who live in this world, poking fun at it with affection. You get the gossip, the stereotypes, the unspoken rules. Reading it, you realize how much of human nature—our vanity, our struggles to keep up appearances, our little daily dramas—is timeless, even if the costumes and customs have changed.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history lovers who want to move beyond dates and battles into the messy, lively reality of the past. It's also a treasure for writers, artists, or anyone who loves people-watching. Think of it as the most detailed, beautifully drawn sourcebook for a historical novel ever made. It's a slow, browsing kind of book—dip in for a character or two at a time. If you're looking for a fast-paced plot, look elsewhere. But if you want to wander the streets of 1840s France and eavesdrop on its inhabitants, this is your ticket.



🔓 Legal Disclaimer

This historical work is free of copyright protections. Feel free to use it for personal or commercial purposes.

Elijah Torres
3 months ago

Finally found time to read this!

Oliver White
11 months ago

After finishing this book, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. Highly recommended.

Richard Allen
1 month ago

Just what I was looking for.

Paul Jones
7 months ago

The fonts used are very comfortable for long reading sessions.

Betty Moore
2 months ago

I was skeptical at first, but the arguments are well-supported by credible references. I learned so much from this.

5
5 out of 5 (16 User reviews )

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