Cover for Trilby
Project MimesaTrilbyGeorge du Maurier
Catalog cover adapted from Portrait de femme by Charles Joshua Chaplin.

Trilby

by George du Maurier

In Trilby, George du Maurier offers a fiction first published in 1894. Set in bohemian 1850s Paris, it follows three British art students who befriend Trilby O'Ferrall, a tone-deaf artist's model beloved by all who meet her. When the sinister musician Svengali enters her life, he transforms her through hypnosis into a celebrated opera singer. But this mysterious power comes at a terrible cost, leading to tragedy for all involved. The novel shaped popular notions of bohemian life and became a cultural phenomenon. Themes of Artists, Artists' models, and Hypnotists give the work a clear emotional and intellectual center. Form and tone matter throughout, with a character-centered narrative style that rewards attention to voice, structure, and perspective. At roughly 102,042 words with an average difficulty reading profile, it offers a reading commitment that is easy to judge before beginning while still leaving room for close attention. Its continuing value lies in its capacity to make unfamiliar lives and difficult choices emotionally legible. For modern readers, the pleasure comes from entering its particular world while noticing how its central concerns still shape personal and public life.

Fiction 1894 English 1,583 catalog downloads

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