Le calendrier de Vénus by Octave Uzanne
I picked this up expecting a stuffy old French novel. What I got was a time-travel story written before time travel was a sci-fi cliché. The plot is simple but brilliant.
The Story
A gentleman in 1880s Paris acquires a strange artifact: the 'Calendar of Venus.' Each month, instead of a number, it shows him the life of a different woman living in the 20th century. He's a spectator, peering into their daily routines, careers, and social lives. These aren't grand adventures; they're glimpses of ordinary independence—a woman running a business, another pursuing an education, others simply living free from the constraints he knows. His own world feels suddenly very small and very old-fashioned.
Why You Should Read It
Uzanne's genius is in the quiet contrast. The narrator's fascination is genuine, but it's mixed with confusion and a hint of melancholy. He's witnessing the future of gender roles from the past, and it unsettles him. The book isn't a manifesto; it's a series of vivid, speculative portraits. You get the feeling Uzanne himself is working through his own hopes and anxieties about where society was headed. The 'calendar' is just a beautiful device to explore that.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect pick for readers who love historical fiction with a speculative twist. If you enjoy stories that ask 'what if?' without needing lasers or spaceships, this is for you. It's also a fascinating find for anyone interested in early ideas about feminism and social change. It’s short, imaginative, and feels oddly modern for a book written over a century ago. A true hidden gem.
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Elizabeth Wilson
9 months agoFive stars!
Joshua Smith
4 months agoI didn't expect much, but the plot twists are genuinely surprising. Exactly what I needed.
Melissa King
6 months agoAfter hearing about this author multiple times, the flow of the text seems very fluid. One of the best books I've read this year.
Deborah Taylor
8 months agoUsed this for my thesis, incredibly useful.
Emily Miller
1 year agoCitation worthy content.