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Seven Stories Press

Works of Radical Imagination

Book cover for The Solitude of Compassion
Book cover for The Solitude of Compassion

Translated by Edward Ford

With a foreword by Henry Miller

Jean Giono’s The Solitude of Compassion, a collection of short stories never before available in English, won popular acclaim when it was originally published in France in 1932. It tells of small-town life in Provence, drawing on a whole village of fictional characters, often warm and decent, at times immoral and coarse. Giono writes of friendship forged in a battlefield trench in the midst of World War I; an old man’s discovery of the song of the world; and, in the title story, the nexus of compassion and pity. In these twenty stories, Giono reveals his marvelous storytelling through his vivid images and lyrical prose, whether he is conveying the delicate scents of lavender and pine trees or the smells of damp earth and fresh blood.

Book cover for The Solitude of Compassion
Book cover for The Solitude of Compassion

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“There is still dew on this world of Giono's; he looks out on it and records his impressions of it almost as if he were the first man seeing it.”

“Giono gives us the world we live in, a world of dream, passion and reality.”

Jean Giono

JEAN GIONO (1895–1970) was born in Manosque, Provence, the son of a shoemaker and a washerwoman. A widely beloved figure in his native France, he is the author of many novels, including The Solitude of Compassion, and the best known of which are Song of the World and Horseman on the Roof. He was awarded the Prize of Prince Rainier of Monaco for his body of work in 1953, became a member of the Académie Goncourt in 1954, and accepted a seat on the Literary Counsel of Monaco in 1963. Except for a few trips to Paris and abroad, Giono spent his entire life in his hometown in Provence.