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Novels By Paul De Kock Vol. X Sister Anne
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Novels By Paul De Kock Vol. X Sister Anne in Franklin, TN
Current price: $23.99

Barnes and Noble
Novels By Paul De Kock Vol. X Sister Anne in Franklin, TN
Current price: $23.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Novels Of Paul De Kock Vol. X: Sister Anne explores the quiet unraveling of personal illusion against the glittering fa ade of Parisian society, where inner restlessness is veiled beneath humor and spectacle. Through the lens of one man s reflective wanderings, the novel investigates the quiet tension between impulse and consequence, as decisions made in moments of carelessness accumulate into moral and social entanglements. The city s grandeur provides a stark contrast to internal disorder, turning familiar streets into spaces of reckoning. Lavish surroundings and formal gatherings only heighten the dissonance between appearances and sincerity, exposing the fragility of reputation and the limitations of social mobility. Friendship, while central, becomes a mirror reflecting shame and dependency, revealing how relationships shift when touched by desperation. The work s comedy is never indulgent; it sharpens the contours of disillusionment and turns superficial charm into a device for critique. Beneath its lively surface, the novel remains grounded in an interrogation of self-worth, dignity, and the price of evasion within an unforgiving social framework.
Novels Of Paul De Kock Vol. X: Sister Anne explores the quiet unraveling of personal illusion against the glittering fa ade of Parisian society, where inner restlessness is veiled beneath humor and spectacle. Through the lens of one man s reflective wanderings, the novel investigates the quiet tension between impulse and consequence, as decisions made in moments of carelessness accumulate into moral and social entanglements. The city s grandeur provides a stark contrast to internal disorder, turning familiar streets into spaces of reckoning. Lavish surroundings and formal gatherings only heighten the dissonance between appearances and sincerity, exposing the fragility of reputation and the limitations of social mobility. Friendship, while central, becomes a mirror reflecting shame and dependency, revealing how relationships shift when touched by desperation. The work s comedy is never indulgent; it sharpens the contours of disillusionment and turns superficial charm into a device for critique. Beneath its lively surface, the novel remains grounded in an interrogation of self-worth, dignity, and the price of evasion within an unforgiving social framework.

















