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On Hashish
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
$17.00



Paris Spleen (New Directions Paperbook)
New Directions
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The Palm-Wine Drinkard and My Life in the Bush of Ghosts
Grove Press
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Artificial Paradises: Baudelaire's Masterpiece on Hashish
by D. Baudelaire

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Paperback
Publisher: Citadel

At the time of its release in 1860, Charles Baudelaire's "Artificial Paradises (Les Paradis Artificiels)" met with immediate praise. One of the most important French symbolists, Baudelaire led a debauched, violent, and ultimately tragic life, dying an opium addict in 1867. This book, a response to Thomas De Quincey's Confessions of an Opium Eater, serves as a memoir of Baudelaire's last years.

In this beautifully wrought portrait of the effects of wine, opium, and hashish on the mind, Baudelaire captures the dreamlike visions he experienced during his narcotic trances. These hallucinations, sometimes exquisite, sometimes disturbing, and the delusions of grandeur that often accompanied them, constitute the Paradis Artificiels, the gorgeous yet false worlds of ecstasy that eventually led to his ruin. Contrasting the effects of hashish and opium with those of wine, Baudelaire concludes that "wine exalts the will, hashish destroys it" and makes idlers of all those who use it.

This new translation of a controversial book provides fascinating reading as well as a key to the mind of a great writer.


Customer Reviews:
 
Magnifique!
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
This brilliantly-translated version of Baudelaire's writing on hashish is a must-read for literary students of both french and english, as well as wine enthusiasts and anyone who enjoys a good rant.




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11/21/2009 02:50P