Isabelle by André Gide

(9 User reviews)   3119
By Emily Delgado Posted on Jan 9, 2026
In Category - Memoir
Gide, André, 1869-1951 Gide, André, 1869-1951
French
Hey, have you read 'Isabelle' by André Gide? It's this short, strange, and quietly intense book I just finished. The setup is fantastic: a young scholar, Gérard, visits a crumbling French chateau to research its history. But he gets completely sidetracked by a portrait of the previous owner's daughter, Isabelle, who disappeared years ago. The real story isn't in the dusty archives—it's in the weird, tense silence of the family still living there, who clearly know more than they're saying. It's less a romance and more a slow-burn mystery about obsession and the stories we choose to hide. Really makes you think about what's left unsaid in old houses and old families.
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André Gide's Isabelle is a novella that feels like a ghost story without any actual ghosts. Instead, it's haunted by secrets, half-truths, and the powerful hold of the past.

The Story

Gérard Lacase, a dedicated but perhaps naive student, arrives at the run-down Château de la Quartfourche to study its historical papers. He's quickly captivated by a portrait of Isabelle, the former owner's daughter, who left under mysterious circumstances. As he stays with the current, rather odd inhabitants—the Floche family—his scholarly mission falls away. He becomes obsessed with piecing together Isabelle's story from reluctant comments, evasive answers, and the heavy atmosphere of the place itself. The "plot" is Gérard trying to solve a human puzzle, and the tension comes from watching him realize that the truth is messier and sadder than any romantic legend.

Why You Should Read It

Gide is a master of psychological subtlety. He doesn't shout the themes; he whispers them. The book is a brilliant study of how we mythologize people we don't know and how families can be prisons of polite lies. Isabelle herself is almost absent, yet she controls everyone in the house. I found myself questioning, right along with Gérard, what we do with inconvenient truths. Do we cling to a beautiful fiction, or face a painful reality?

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who love character-driven stories with a gothic-tinged atmosphere. If you enjoy books where the setting is a character and the real action happens in the spaces between conversations, you'll devour this. It's not a long book, but it sticks with you, making it a great choice for a thoughtful afternoon read.



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Kevin Davis
6 months ago

The fonts used are very comfortable for long reading sessions.

Oliver Wilson
1 year ago

Amazing book.

Matthew Thomas
4 weeks ago

Very helpful, thanks.

Christopher Torres
7 months ago

Great reference material for my coursework.

Steven Hernandez
1 year ago

Very interesting perspective.

5
5 out of 5 (9 User reviews )

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