First edition on ordinary paper.
Purple half-cloth Bradel binding, smooth spine with a gilt floral motif, gilt initials and double fillet at foot, marbled paper boards, lower corners rubbed, contemporary binding.
Spine sunned, a few small spots of foxing mostly affecting the margins of the leaves.
Precious presentation copy inscribed by Emile Zola to a major inspiration for Germinal: "A Yves Guyot son dévoué confrère. Emile Zola."
Guyot was the author of a novel on an accident and a strike in the mines of Northern France. Together with his economic theories and his series of reports on the Anzin miners’ strike, his work had a profound influence on Zola in the writing of this masterpiece. Guyot even assisted Zola in his research, and introduced him to socialist deputy Alfred Giard with whom Zola visited mines for his novel.
Editor-in-chief of Le Bien Public, where L’Assommoir was first published, Guyot gave Zola the idea of setting this novel in the gloomy decor of the mines: “The revelation came to him in several stages, in a process in which the liberal economist Yves Guyot played a major role. [...] A colleague and personal friend of Zola's, [he] had reported on the Anzin strike in the newspaper Le Voltaire, to which Zola also contributed. He even made it the theme of a novel, which became a kind of indirect apprenticeship for Zola: this was L’Enfer social (1883).
Beyond the coincidence of dates, the study of Guyot’s influence on Zola is worth pursuing for another reason, namely their closeness and friendship, which is thoroughly documented. The relationship between the two men went back a long way. Zola had contributed to Le Rappel in 1869, where Guyot also worked. He was later the drama critic for Le Bien Public from 1876 onwards, in which Guyot was actively involved. [...] Zola and Guyot maintained a friendly correspondence from 1876 to 1884, the year Germinal was written. In this correspondence, the exchange of newly published works by each played an important role, further reinforcing the parallels that can be drawn between their writings. [...] In 1883, the year in which Guyot published his working-class novel about the mines, Zola realised there was material of interest for his second novel and adjusted his plans accordingly. [...] He drew on the experience of Guyot’s novel to correct what he saw as weaknesses and to retain what worked. [...] Like Guyot, Zola also made his novel a narrative marked by sombre tones, by the depiction of tragedies, but above all by the evocation of colour. [...] An examination of the first preparatory documents reveals that Zola had initially intended to follow the structure of Guyot’s novel, introducing the mining accident right at the beginning.” (Benoît Malbranque, “Les inspirations libérales d’Émile Zola dans Germinal,” Institut Coppet).
Their correspondence shows that Zola had discussions with Guyot while writing the novel, and would use his writings in the preparatory file for Germinal (“Notes Guyot,” BNF, MSS, n.a.f. 10308, fos 195–201).
Zola also had Guyot’s unwavering support during the Dreyfus Affair: “From then on, a long and intense struggle began for truth, against judicial error and the injustice done to an innocent man, which Yves Guyot waged with his customary courage. [...] He reprinted the famous letter from his friend Émile Zola, republished his articles on the subject in pamphlet form, then published, in extenso, the stenographic reports of the Zola trial proceedings.” (Benoît Malbranque, “Yves Guyot et l’affaire Dreyfus,” Contrepoints, 8 May 2024).
An exceptional token of recognition from the leader of the Naturalist movement to one of the key figures in the conception of his most celebrated novel.