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Marquis de Sade

Personal Information

Born June 2, 1740
Died December 2, 1814 (74 years old)
Hôtel de Condé, Kingdom of France
Also known as: Sade marquis de, Sade, D.A.F., Marquis De.
36 books
3.4 (26)
515 readers

Description

Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade was a French aristocrat and writer famous for his libertine sexuality and lifestyle. His works include novels, short stories, plays, and political tracts; in his lifetime some were published under his own name, while others appeared anonymously and Sade denied being their author. He is best known for his erotic novels, which combined philosophical discourse with pornography, depicting bizarre sexual fantasies with an emphasis on violence, criminality, and blasphemy against the Catholic Church. He was a proponent of extreme freedom, unrestrained by morality, religion or law. Sade was incarcerated in various prisons and in an insane asylum for about 32 years of his life; eleven years in Paris (10 of which were spent in the Bastille) a month in Conciergerie, two years in a fortress, a year in Madelonnettes, three years in Bicêtre, a year in Sainte-Pélagie, and 13 years in the Charenton asylum. Many of his works were written in prison. The term "sadism" is derived from his name.

Books

Newest First

Œuvres

Jan Potocki, Sophie, comtesse de Ségur, Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, Joseph Louis Lagrange, James Joyce, Jean François Paul de Gondi de Retz, Lewis Carroll, Paul-Louis Courier, Antoine Léonard Thomas, Stéphane Mallarmé, Nicolas Malebranche, Henri Hymans, Jean Paul Marat, Rosa Luxemburg, Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin, Arthur, comte de Gobineau, Lucius Accius, Arthur Rimbaud, Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, Achille Mbembe, Rudyard Kipling, Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, Charles-Louis de Secondat baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu, François duc de La Rochefoucauld, Paul de Kock, Francis de Sales, Lucian of Samosata, Jacques Maritain, Philo of Alexandria, 谷崎潤一郎, Magali Bessone, Henri-Dominique Lacordaire, Simone Weil, Alexis de Tocqueville, François Villon, Bartolomé de las Casas, Jean de La Bruyère, Jean de La Fontaine, Louis Pasteur, Alphonse de Lamartine, Gérard de Nerval, Jacques Bénigne Bossuet, Pierre Maine de Biran, Camille Desmoulins, Turgot, Claude Joseph Dorat, Henri Poincaré, Olympe de Gouges, Jean-Pierre Vernant, Emile Coué, Marquis de Sade, Jean-Pierre Serre, Emmanuel Mounier, Denis Diderot, Friedrich Nietzsche, Gustave Flaubert, Armand Borel, Teresa of Avila, Joseph Conrad, Molière, Gérard Desargues, Alphonse Daudet, Jean-Baptiste Massillon, Frantz Fanon, Ernst Troeltsch, François Rabelais, Emil Cioran, Anatole France, Henri Bergson, François de Salignac de La Mothe-Fénelon, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, Proudhon M., Pierre Corneille, Edmé Mariotte
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Incest

3.5 (2)
42

Few writings explore a woman's love life in such detail, with such subtlety, insight, and pain, as does Anais Nin's original, uncensored diary. It is a life record that deals openly with the physical aspects of relationships and unsparingly with the full spectrum of psychological ramifications. Here was a woman who sought the freedom to act out her sexual and emotional desires with the same guiltless, "amoral" abandon that men have always claimed for themselves. When Nin began publishing sections of her diary in 1966, this aspect of her life was excised, though clearly there was more than could be told at the time concerning her relationships with Henry Miller and his wife, June, with the writer and actor Antonin Artaud, with her analysts Rene Allendy and Otto Rank, and - most important - with her father. Here now is the previously missing portion of Nin's life in the crucial years from 1932 to 1934, the shattering psychological drama that drove her to seek absolution from her psychoanalysts for the ultimate transgression. In its raw exposure of a woman's struggle to come to terms with herself, to find salvation in the very act of writing, Incest unveils an Anais Nin without masks and secrets, yet in the end still mysterious, perhaps inexplicable.

The crimes of love

3.0 (1)
19

"Murder, seduction, and incest are among the cruel rewards for selfless love in Sade's stories; tragedy, despair, and death the inevitable outcome. In this text Sade asks questions about society, about ourselves, and about life, for which we have yet to find the answers"--Provided by publisher.

Wolf's Complete Book of Terror

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7

The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas / Ursula K. Le Guin I Love My Love / Helen Adam I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream / Harlan Ellison The Tattooer / Junichiro Tanizaki A Selection from Steps / Jerzy Kosinski Axolotl / Julio Cortazar [Wish]( / Roald Dahl The Lottery / Shirley Jackson It's a Good Life / Jerome Bixby They Bite / Anthony Boucher The Last Night of the World / Ray Bradbury Born of Man and Woman / Richard Matheson Piazza Piece / John Crowe Ransom The South / Jorge Luis Borges The Fly / George Langelaan The Doll / Algernon Blackwood The Ghost / Richard Hughes The Hunted Beast / T. F. Powys End / Langston Hughes The Rival Dummy / Ben Hecht Caterpillars / E. F. Benson Lukundoo / Edward Lucas White Sredni Vashtar / Saki (H. H. Munro) The Picture un the House / H. P. Lovecraft Pollock and the Porroh Man / H. G. Wells The Spider / Hans Heinz Ewers The White Wolf of the Hartz Mountains / Frederick Marryat Tcheriapin / Sax Rohmer My Doll Janie / Lola Ridge The Monkey's Paw / W. W. Jacobs The Mark of the Beast / Rudyard Kipling Manacled / Stephen Crane Yuki-Onna / Lafcadio Hearn Mujina / Lafcadio Hearn The Squaw / Bram Stoker The Yellow Wallpaper / Chalotte Perkins Gilman The Black Mass, Episode from La-bas (Down There) / J. K. Huysmans The Magic Shirt / Anonymous Carmilla / Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu Not to Be Taken at Bed-time / Rosa Mulholland The Very Sad Tale of the Matches / Heinrich Hoffmann The Man-Tiger / Anonymous The Hours in the Life of a Lousy-Haired Man, Episode from Maldoror Varney, the Vampyre / James Malcolm Rymer The Horla / Guy de Maupassant A Carrion / Charles Baudelaire [Pit and the Pendulum]( / Edgar Allan Poe [Black Cat]( / Edgar Allan Poe [Birthmark]( / Nathaniel Hawthorne La Belle Helene / Prosper Merimee Nuckelavee / Anonymous La Bella Dame Sans Merci / John Keats Isabella, or The Pot Basil The Erl-King / Johann Wolfgang von Goethe The Count de Gernande, Episode from Justine / The Marquis de Sade Lord Randal / Anonymous The Painted Skin / P'u Sung-ling Satan at the Gates of Hell, from Paradise Lost, Book II / John Milton The Milk-White Doo / Anonymous The Wife of Usher's Well / Anonymous Bluebeard / Charles Perrault The Vampire, Episode from The Golden Ass / Lucius Apuleius Jael / Book of Judges

Virtue

3.0 (1)
16

They called it their "double act." And in Europe's most exclusive gaming halls, Judith Davenport and her brother, Sebastian, used the technique to dupe unwary noblemen out of their pocket money. First, Judith lured them to the card tables with her ravishing smile. Then, employing her fan in an elaborate code, she made sure that Sebastian's luck never ran out. It was a dangerous game played in preparation for one desperate purpose: to avenge their father's tragic death. But the Davenports never bargained for the penetrating scrutiny of a certain strikingly handsome lord who had come to see for himself the woman who had all of Brussels at her feet, including his besotted nephew. Marcus Devlin, the honorable marquis of Carrington, wasn't fooled for an instant by Judith's air of innocence—or by her flirtatious way with a fan. Instead he was amused, infuriated, and intrigued enough to draw the bewitching schemer into a daring gamble of his own . . . where the stakes were nothing less than the lady's heart.

Juliette

3.0 (2)
36

the most beautiful, depraved, blasphemous and sexually stimulating erotic book I have ever enjoyed

Os cento e vinte dias de sodoma

5.0 (1)
1

Donatien, ou comumente chamado Sâde, foi um escritor da decadência aristocrática francesa. Seu livro, Os cento e vinte dias de sodoma, é o retrato de um grupo decadente mas indiferente à própria decadência, degenerado e ainda a isso indiferete.

Justine

3.0 (3)
57

Story of the modern Egyptian city of Alexandria, in which an Irish schoolmaster, a passionate, tormented Jewess, a Greek cabaret dancer, and a Coptic financier play out their destinies amid decadent surroundings symbolic of an erotic world. Justine, published in 1957, is the first volume in Lawrence Durrell's literary tetralogy, The Alexandria Quartet. The tetralogy consists of four interlocking novels, each of which recounts various aspects of a complex story of passion and deception from differing points of view. The quartet is set in the Egyptian city of Alexandria in the 1930s and 1940s. The city itself is described by Durrell as becoming as much of a complex character as the human protagonists of the novels.