History of My Life: Introduction by John Julius Norwich

History of My Life: Introduction by John Julius Norwich

History of My Life: Introduction by John Julius Norwich

History of My Life: Introduction by John Julius Norwich

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Overview

The name of Giacomo Casanova, Chevalier de Seingalt (1725-98), is now synonymous with amorous exploits, and there are plenty of these, vividly narrated, in his memoirs. But Casanova was not just an energetic lover. In his time he was a diplomat, businessman, trainee priest, traveler, prisoner, magician, confidence man, gambler, professional entertainer, and charlatan. He financed business projects, organized lotteries, wrote opera libretti, and dabbled in high politics. Above all he was an autobiographer of enduring brilliance and subtlety who left behind him what is probably the most remarkable confession ever written.

Casanova explored to the full all the possibilities eighteenth-century Venice offered by way of love and profit before being imprisoned, escaping from jail, and fleeing from the city to begin travels that took him across Europe. In Moscow and London, Berlin and Constantinople, he met the famous men and women of his time—Catherine the Great, Voltaire, Louis XV, Rousseau—and recorded his encounters for the memoirs he wrote in retirement at the end of his life.

History of My Life is by turns touching, thrilling, wonderfully comic, and quite irresistible. The present edition, which includes approximately one third of Casanova's enormous (and unfinished) book, contains all his major adventures and all his greatest affairs of the heart.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307265579
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 02/06/2007
Series: Everyman's Library Classics Series
Pages: 1512
Sales rank: 696,695
Product dimensions: 5.33(w) x 8.30(h) x 2.02(d)

About the Author

The name of Giacomo Casanova, Chevalier de Seingalt (1725-98), is now synonymous with amorous exploits, and there are plenty of these, vividly narrated, in his memoirs. But Casanova was not just an energetic lover. In his time, he was a diplomat, businessman, trainee priest, traveler, prisoner, magician, confidence man, gambler, professional entertainer, and charlatan. He financed business projects, organized lotteries, wrote opera libretti, and dabbled in high politics. Above all he was an autobiographer of enduring brilliance and subtlety who left behind him what is probably the most remarkable confession ever written. He lived in the Republic of Venice.

Table of Contents


Introduction     ix
Select Bibliography     xxiii
Chronology     xxiv
Foreword     lxvii
Volume 1     1
Contents     3
Preface     15
Volume 2     189
Volume 3     265
Volume 4     413
Volume 5     569
Volume 6     653
Volume 7     727
Volume 8     775
Volume 9     823
Volume 10     957
Volume 11     1073
Textual Note
Biographical     1173
The Publishing History of the Memoirs     1177
Laforgue and the Text of the Memoirs     1178
The New Text     1183
Notes     1186
Index     1403

What People are Saying About This

Edmund Wilson

"The Chevalier de Seingalt was a most remarkable man, who had some of the qualities of greatness... Has any novelist or poet ever rendered better than Casanova the passing glory of the personal life?—the gaiety, the spontaneity, the generosity of youth: the ups and downs of middle age when our character begins to get to us and we are forced to come to terms with it; the dreadful blanks of later years, when what is gone is gone. All that a life of this kind can contain Casanova put into his story. And how much of the world!—the eighteenth century as you get it in no other book; society from top to bottom; Europe from England to Russia, a more brilliant variety of characters than you can find in any eighteenth-century novel."

V. S. Pritchett

"Casanova is unsurpassed as the recreator of the daily talking interests of 18th-century Europe. He ranges from slut to patrician, from closet to cabinet, waterfront to palace. He is superior to all other erotic writers because of his pleasure in news, in gossip, in the whole personality of his mistresses."

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