> Skip to content
  • Published: 15 February 2011
  • ISBN: 9781590173640
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 192
  • RRP: $44.99

Nature Stories




The natural world in all its richness, glimpsed variously in the house, the barnyard, and the garden, in ponds and streams, and at large in the woods and the fields, including old friends like the dog, the cat, the cow, and the pig, along with more unusual and sometimes alarming characters such as the weasel, the dragonfly, snakes of several sorts, and even a whale, not to mention ants in their seeming infinitude and a single humble potato—all these and more are the subjects of what may well be the most deft and delightful book of literary miniatures ever written. In Jules Renard’s world, plants and animals not only feel but speak (one species, the swallow, appears to write Hebrew), and yet, for all the anthropomorphic wit and whimsy the author indulges in, they guard their mystery too. Sly, funny, and touching, Nature Stories, here beautifully rendered into English by Douglas Parmée and accompanied by the wonderful ink-brush images of Pierre Bonnard with which the book was originally published, is a literary classic of inexhaustible freshness.

  • Published: 15 February 2011
  • ISBN: 9781590173640
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 192
  • RRP: $44.99

About the author

Jules Renard

Jules Renard (1864–1910) was a French author and a member of the Académie Goncourt, most famous for the works Poil de carotte (Carrot Top) and Histoires naturelles (Nature Stories). Among his other works are Le Plaisir de rompre (The Pleasure of Breaking) and Huit jours à la campagne (Eight Days in the Countryside). His Journal was published in the United States in 2008.

Praise for Nature Stories

  • Praise for Jules Renard's Journals:
  • "The irresistibly quotable Journal of Jules Renard, a record of Renard's development as a writer in fin de siècle France, demonstrates his gift for quips, aphorisms, and striking observations." --BookForum
  • "Renard's Journal quickly became a touchstone for modern French literary sensibilities: tart, self-critical, observant, skeptical, and, most of all, capable of a memorable image or phrase." --R.R. Reno, FirstThings.com
  • "It's not hard to imagine why Renard's journal is a favorite among the literati...in Renard's hands, the immense, impossible beauty of the world and this life it affords us somehow becomes bigger when reduced to these constitutive bits." --Quarterly Conversation
  • penguin pop image
    penguin pop image