A Second Home
Honoré de Balzac
Read by Bruce Pirie





This novella was first published in French in 1830, with the title “La femme vertueuse” (“The virtuous woman”). In an 1842 edition, the title was changed to “Une double famille” (“A double family”).
For Balzac, success in marital relations depended on partners being well matched both in temperament and in social class. In this story, a young lawyer marries a childhood friend, only to discover too late that she has become narrow-mindedly religious. She is described as a “bigot.” (In French, the word specifically suggests religious prudery more than it does in English.) To escape the sanctimonious chill of this marital home, the lawyer sets up an impoverished seamstress as his mistress. The story explores the plight of women and the pathology of marriage. - Summary by Bruce Pirie (3 hr 22 min)
Chapters
Section 1 | 51:36 | Read by Bruce Pirie |
Section 2 | 36:52 | Read by Bruce Pirie |
Section 3 | 35:39 | Read by Bruce Pirie |
Section 4 | 34:11 | Read by Bruce Pirie |
Section 5 | 43:55 | Read by Bruce Pirie |
Reviews
Not a happy book





Linda in PNW
I found this book quite depressing. It's hard to understand why the Count made the choices he did. I suppose in the 1800's divorce wasn't possible. If the intention is to make the reader ponder what happiness is, he was successful. The reader is great and his voice is soothing.
Illustrative





Luis Robles
ilIustrative of religoius and social thought of the Period.