The Necklace
Titel

The Necklace

Beschreibung
A glittering evening. The rustle of silk. The gleam of chandeliers and whispered admiration following her every graceful turn. In that moment, she is everything she was born to be—adored, envied, radiant. But the night ends. And reality waits in the shadows. In a world where appearances speak louder than truths, how much is one willing to sacrifice to fit into a vision of elegance? And when the cost of illusion becomes a lifelong sentence, what remains of the dream? Guy de Maupassant's timeless masterpiece invites us to peer beneath the surface of glittering society, where borrowed beauty may exact an unexpected price. With quiet irony and surgical precision, he dissects pride, poverty, and the haunting fragility of aspiration. This is not merely a story about a necklace. It is about the fine thread that separates what we desire from what we can bear, what we pretend from what we become. In the span of a few short pages, Maupassant crafts a fable so deceptively simple, and yet so devastatingly true, that its final revelation lingers like a whisper long after the story ends. Elegant, biting, and heartbreakingly human—The Necklace is a jewel of short fiction that reflects our own illusions back at us. What is truly precious? And what, in the end, are we really wearing?
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Produktdetails
Titel:
The Necklace
gelesen von:
Sprache:
EN
ISBN Audio:
4069828346383
Erscheinungsdatum:
17. April 2025
Laufzeit
22 Min
Produktart
AUDIO
Explizit:
Nein
Hörspiel:
Nein
Ungekürzt:
Ja
Über den Autor:
Guy de Maupassant (1850–1893) Born on August 5, 1850, in Normandy, France, and gone too soon by July 6, 1893, Guy de Maupassant lived fast and wrote faster. He packed a lifetime of stories—some scandalous, some sorrowful—into just over four decades, becoming one of the sharpest pens in 19th-century literature. Maupassant didn't start off with dreams of literary stardom. He worked boring government jobs, dodged responsibilities, and loitered in Paris cafés. But behind that nonchalant exterior was a keen observer of human nature. With the encouragement of his mentor, Gustave Flaubert, he launched his literary career—and never looked back. His breakout short story Boule de Suif (1880) wasn't just a success; it was a mic-drop moment in French literature. From then on, Maupassant mastered the short story like few ever have. He wrote with surgical precision—no fluff, no filters. His characters are raw, ironic, often tragic, and always unforgettable. War, madness, hypocrisy, lust, and loneliness—he tackled them all, often drawing from his own troubled life. Maupassant wasn't afraid to get dark. And maybe that's what makes his work so magnetic—it stares directly into the uncomfortable parts of being human. Though his mind unraveled toward the end, and he died in a state of mental collapse, his stories remain razor-sharp. Maupassant showed that great storytelling doesn't need to shout—it only needs to tell the truth, with just the right twist.