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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/506974

Trilby a novel

"100 years ago, Trilby, the story of the beautiful artists' model and her sinister mentor, Svengali, burst upon an astonished world. It is the tale of Bohemian Paris that is by turns evocative, funny, and poignant as it describes Trilby's rise to musical stardom under Svengali's influence."

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  • "Overview: "Du Maurier's Trilby was the novel sensation of the 1890s. Du Maurier had spent a good deal of his life as a child and later as an art student in Paris; when he turned from his career in journalism and magazine illustration to novel writing he found enormous success with a novel divided as his own life had been between Paris and London. Billee, an English artist living the Bohemian life abroad, meets and falls in love with Trilby, a Parisian model. Differences in social class doom their romance, but Trilby, taught by the mysterious hypnotist Svengali to sing like "some enchanted princess" becomes a famous entertainer. As it turns out, however, her talent and her possession of her own mind have become dependent on Svengali maintaining his spell over her. "The name "Svengali" came to be applied to any hypnotist and the image of Svengali carved a lasting place in the popular imagination. Perhaps the most important expression of 1890s Bohemianism, Trilby has also attracted interest in recent years on account of its presentation of hypnosis and split personality, and for the conflicted but often anti-Semitic presentation of the mysterious Svengali."
  • ""100 years ago, Trilby, the story of the beautiful artists' model and her sinister mentor, Svengali, burst upon an astonished world. It is the tale of Bohemian Paris that is by turns evocative, funny, and poignant as it describes Trilby's rise to musical stardom under Svengali's influence.""@en
  • ""Little Billee is a young English painter with great talent. He and his friends Taffy and the Laird share a studio in a Quartier Latin neighborhood full of artists and musicians, including a German-Polish music teacher named Svengali. The group become acquainted with an artists' model named Trilby, who was orphaned as a child and who works to support her little brother and herself. Trilby is lively, charming, unpretentious, and beautiful, and soon Little Billee is madly in love. When his mother learns that Little Billee intends to marry an artists' model (nude models were almost as socially unacceptable as protitutes) she travels to Paris and tells Trilby that such a marriage would mean ruin for Billee and his family. Trilby promises that she will never see Little Billee again. Soon afterward, Trilby vanishes, leaving Billee sick and distraught. Many years later, Billee and his friends hear of a singer called "La Svengali" who has astonished all of Europe. By attending one of her performances, they learn that "La Svengali" is the wife of the music teacher they knew in the Quartier Latin, trained by him to sing with more technical mastery than anyone has ever heard. When "La Svengali" appears on stage, they see that she is none other than Trilby. Her singing moves the audience to tears, though everyone notices that she moves stiffly and strangely and that her face is as blank as an automaton's. Not until Svengali dies suddenly during a concert is Trilby set free from the hypnotic spell that has controlled her for years.""--Allreaders.com."@en
  • "Trilby (1894) is a gothic horror novel by George du Maurier and one of the most popular novels of its time, perhaps the second best selling novel of the Fin de siècle period after Bram Stoker's Dracula. Trilby is set in the 1850s in an idyllic bohemian Paris. Though it features the hijinks of three lovable English artists & mdash; especially the delicate genius Little Billee & mdash; its most memorable character is Svengali, a Jewish rogue, a masterful musician ..."@en
  • "An artist's model succumbs to the hypnotic powers of a strange musician."@en
  • "Svengali exerts his strange and hypnotic influence over a beautiful young girl, in this classic story of a life in the Latin Quarter of Paris."
  • "Du Maurier's Trilby was the novel sensation of the 1890s. Du Maurier had spent a good deal of his life as a child and later as an art student in Paris; when he turned from his career in journalism and magazine illustration to novel writing he found enormous success with a novel divided as his own life had been between Paris and London. Billee, an English artist living the Bohemian life abroad, meets and falls in love with Trilby, a Parisian model. Differences in social class doom their romance, but Trilby, taught by the mysterious hypnotist Svengali to sing like "some enchanted princess" becomes a famous entertainer. As it turns out, however, her talent and her possession of her own mind have become dependent on Svengali maintaining his spell over her. "The name "Svengali" came to be applied to any hypnotist and the image of Svengali carved a lasting place in the popular imagination. Perhaps the most important expression of 1890s Bohemianism, Trilby has also attracted interest in recent years on account of its presentation of hypnosis and split personality, and for the conflicted but often anti-Semitic presentation of the mysterious Svengali."@en
  • "In the Latin Quarter of Paris, Trilby O'Ferrall--graceful, charming and innocent - is working as an artist's model. Her ingenuous nature makes her the perfect prey for the cruel magnetism of the demonic musician Svengali, under whose spell she falls. Using hypnotic powers Svengali shapes her into a virtuoso singer and soon she becomes Europe's most captivating soprano. But her golden voice, and even her life, will become fatally tied to him. With its thrilling plot and legendary villain, Trilby caused a sensation when it appeared in 1894, spawning songs, shoes and, most famously, the Trilby hat."
  • "Svengali meets the tone-deaf Trilby, a lovely young woman who the men in the novel fall in love with. However, Svengali is able to turn Tribly into a star, la Svengali. But is the talent really there?"

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Vertalingen (vorm)"
  • "Proofs (Printing)"@en
  • "Genres littéraires"
  • "Publishers' cloth bindings (Binding)"
  • "Publishers' cloth bindings (Binding)"@en
  • "Powieść angielska"
  • "Feuilletons"
  • "Fiction"@es
  • "Fiction"
  • "Fiction"@en
  • "Livre électronique (Descripteur de forme)"
  • "Romans (teksten)"
  • "Ressource Internet (Descripteur de forme)"
  • "Love stories"
  • "Love stories"@en
  • "Tekstuitgave"
  • "Large type books"@en
  • "Publishers' catalogs"
  • "Publishers' catalogs"@en
  • "Psychological fiction"
  • "Psychological fiction"@en
  • "Three deckers"
  • "Three deckers"@en
  • "Electronic books"@en
  • "Electronic books"
  • "Authors' annotations (Provenance)"@en
  • "Publishers' advertisements"
  • "Publishers' advertisements"@en
  • "Musical fiction"
  • "Musical fiction"@en
  • "Ressources Internet"

http://schema.org/name

  • "Trilby a novel"
  • "Trilby a novel"@en
  • "Trilby. [Abridged.]"@en
  • "Trilby a novel ; with illustrations by the author"
  • "Trilby : a novel. With ill. by the author"
  • "Trilby : in two volumes"
  • "Trilby : Roman : Dt. von Marg. Jacobi tutorisiert"
  • "Trilby; a novel"@en
  • "Trilby a novel : with illustrations by the author"
  • "Trilby : with illustrations by the author"
  • "Trilby [pages from vol. 88 of Harper's New Monthly Magazine]"
  • "Trilby : [a novel]"
  • "Trilby : Roman"
  • "Trilby : Roman"@da
  • "Tril'bi"
  • "Trilby. With illus. by the author. Pref. by Gerald Du Maurier"@en
  • "Trilby, a novel"
  • "Trilby, a novel"@en
  • "La Svengali"@en
  • "Trilby. Roman"
  • "Trilby. Roman"@da
  • "Trilby; Roman"
  • "Trilʹbi : roman"
  • "Trilbi = Trilby"
  • "Trilby : a novel / by George du Maurier; with ill. by the author"
  • "Trilby, a novel, with illus. by the author"@en
  • "Svengali"@es
  • "Svengali"
  • "Trilby. (Seventh edition.)"
  • "Trilʹbi"
  • "Trilby : a novel"
  • "Trilby : a novel"@en
  • "Trilby : with ill. by the author"
  • "Trilby ; A novel with illustrations by the author"
  • "Tril'bi : roman"
  • "[Trilby. (Seventh edition.)]"
  • "Trilby, by George Du Maurier"
  • "Trilby"@pl
  • "Trilby"@da
  • "Trilby"
  • "Trilby"@en
  • "Trilby"@es
  • "Trilby In 2 vol"
  • "Trilby : A novel"
  • "Trilby : With illustr. by the author. Pref. by Sir Gerald du Maurier"

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