I discovered the writing of Lydia Davis during my freshman year at Sarah Lawrence College, when a friend loaned me a copy of her first short story collection, Break it Down, and said, “You have to read this. You’ll love it.” Davis immediately became one of my favorite writers; I consumed her subsequent collections and her one novel, The End of the Story, with the wondrous intensity of an acolyte, wrote imitative stories in my fiction workshop, and joyfully stood in line to have my copy of Samuel Johnson is Indignant signed after her reading at the 92nd Street Y.
Since that time, Davis has received a MacArthur Fellowship (the “genius award”), was named a Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French government, and was awarded the 2003 French-American Foundation Translation Prize for her translation of Swann’s Way. Basically, Lydia Davis is one of the smartest people in the world (along with Anne Carson). I loved Davis’ translation of Swann’s Way (and wish she translated all seven volumes of In Search of Lost Time), so I was excited to re-read Gustave Flaubert’s first novel told through Davis’s clear, faithfully discerning voice.
Madame Bovary is a beautiful novel, and is considered by many to be the first masterpiece of realist fiction. When it was first published in 1857, Emma Bovary was thought to be so lifelike that several women claimed to be the model for the character, and the French government deemed the book immoral (solidifying its popularity). Each character balances nobility and ridiculousness such that the reader cannot help but identify with attributes of each, and the details of the tragic conclusion will hang with you for days.
Whether or not you’ve read Madame Bovary in the past, Davis’s translation is reportedly the most faithful rendering of Flaubert’s book (unless you can read it in French, which I, sadly, cannot). As the characters in the novel discover, a translation can never be exactly true, and sometimes beauty is the next best thing. As Flaubert writes, “none of us can ever express the exact measure of our needs, or our ideas, or our sorrows, and human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we beat out tunes for bears to dance to, when we long to move the stars to pity.”
Want to win a copy of Madame Bovary? Just leave a comment here or on our Facebook page and one lucky person will win.
–Sarah Rose Nordgren, Publicity Assistant
Tags: 92nd Street Y, Anne Carson, Gustave Flaubert, Lydia Davis, MacArthur Fellowship, Madame Bovary, Samuel Johnson Is Indignant, Sarah Lawrence, Sarah Rose Nordgren, Swann's Way, The End of the Story, Translation Prize, What We're Reading

Lynne says...
Now that I am of an age to truly appreciate Emma Bovary, I’m hoping to read this translated version.
November 29, 2010@ 9:29 PMDavid Correa says...
Very excited about this new translation!
November 29, 2010@ 8:29 PMMelissa says...
I’ve been dying to read this translation!
November 29, 2010@ 7:38 PMTeresa says...
I’ve been reading about this translation, and I am thoroughly intrigued in being able to reread ‘Madame Bovary’ and experience it in a new light. How wonderful!
November 29, 2010@ 6:30 PMKevin says...
I wish more fiction writers translated foreign works; seems to make for a dynamic and interesting exchange of ideas. Guess you need to be capable, though, and passionate: it takes time. I’m definitely interested in a potential copy, though, thanks for the opportunity.
November 29, 2010@ 6:10 PMMirtes Oliveira says...
As a student of translation (Potuguese – English – French), and a literature lover, it would be really great to have a copy of this translation.
November 29, 2010@ 5:55 PMJen says...
Oh, I’ve heard this is perhaps the best translation of “Bovary” yet released! I’d love to get my hands and eyeballs on a copy! Thank you for the opportunity.
November 29, 2010@ 5:51 PMChelly says...
Would love to win a copy of this book. Cheers!
November 29, 2010@ 5:51 PMCassie says...
i do.
November 29, 2010@ 5:50 PMLinda Johnson says...
I would love for my number to come up to get this book. Thanks in advance.
November 29, 2010@ 4:02 PM