Jump to content

Letters from My Windmill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Letters From My Windmill)
Letters from My Windmill
Mill of Alphonse Daudet at Fontvieille.
AuthorAlphonse Daudet
Original titleLettres de mon moulin
LanguageFrench
Publication date
1869
Publication placeFrance
ISBN9782266156288

Letters from My Windmill (French: Lettres de mon moulin) is a collection of short stories by Alphonse Daudet first published in its entirety in 1869. Some of the stories had been published earlier in newspapers or journals such as Le Figaro and L'Evénement as early as 1865.

The stories are all told by the author in the first person, typically addressing a Parisian reader. The author, having relocated his home from Paris, recounts short bucolic tales about his new life in Provence as well as his trips to Corsica and French Algeria. The stories vary from day-to-day events in southern France to Provençal folktales, and often feature professions and faunal references characteristic of Provence. The tales are characterised by pity, tenderness and sadness, alongside gaiety and mockery.[1]

Letters From My Windmill is sometimes considered to be Daudet's most important work. It is cherished by many French, particularly in the South, for the picture it paints of the local culture.

A French-language film with the same title was made in 1954 by Marcel Pagnol composed of four stories: "The Three Low Masses", "The Elixir of Father Gaucher", "The Priest of Cucugnan" and "The Secret Of Master Cornille".

Trivia

[edit]

The Belgian comic author Mitteï made a comic adaptation of the book in three volumes between 1979-1985, which were released in Dutch, French and the French dialect of Liège.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Louis Forrestier, commentary in the Livre de Poche edition, 1985, quoting with approval Jules Lemaître

Further reading

[edit]
  • Hare, Geoffrey E. (1982). "The Unity of Lettres de Mon Moulin," Nineteenth-Century French Studies, Vol. 10, No. 3/4, pp. 317–325.
[edit]