Oeuvres complètes, tome 1 by Laurence Sterne

(17 User reviews)   3898
By Thomas Pham Posted on Jan 9, 2026
In Category - Digital Balance
Sterne, Laurence, 1713-1768 Sterne, Laurence, 1713-1768
French
Hey, I just read the weirdest, most wonderful book collection. It's Laurence Sterne's complete first volume, and it's basically 18th-century literature having an identity crisis in the best way possible. Forget everything you think you know about old novels. This thing is full of blank pages, bizarre diagrams, and a narrator who can't tell a simple story to save his life. The main 'conflict' is between the author and the very idea of a straight line. He keeps promising to tell you about his life, then gets distracted by a button, a sermon, or a philosophical thought about noses. It's hilarious, frustrating, and strangely brilliant. If you're tired of predictable plots, this is your antidote.
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Okay, so calling this a 'story' is being generous. Laurence Sterne's first volume collects his groundbreaking (and mind-bending) work, most notably The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. The plot? Tristram tries to write his autobiography. That's it. That's the whole goal. The hilarious problem is that he's constitutionally incapable of getting to the point. He gets sidetracked for chapters about his uncle's war wound, his father's strange theories, and digressions within digressions. He's born about halfway through the book. The 'story' is less about events and more about watching a brilliant, playful mind at work, actively breaking every rule of storytelling.

Why You Should Read It

You should read this because it feels modern. Seriously. Sterne was messing with form in the 1750s like a postmodern novelist. The book has black pages for mourning, marbled pages, and even a blank page for you to draw your own idea of a character. It's a book about how we think and tell stories—jumpy, associative, and full of heart. Characters like Uncle Toby, the gentle veteran obsessed with fortifications, are some of the most lovingly drawn in literature. It's laugh-out-loud funny, but also deeply human.

Final Verdict

This is not for someone who wants a fast-paced, plot-driven novel. It's for the curious reader, the person who loves playful language and doesn't mind a narrator who takes the scenic route through a thought. Perfect for fans of Kurt Vonnegut or Douglas Adams who want to see where that kind of narrative mischief started. It's a book that trusts you to keep up with its chaos, and the reward is a reading experience like no other.



📢 Public Domain Content

This title is part of the public domain archive. It is available for public use and education.

Emma Allen
1 month ago

Not bad at all.

Richard Walker
1 year ago

Great read!

Noah Allen
1 year ago

Enjoyed every page.

David Perez
1 year ago

Recommended.

Joshua Nguyen
1 year ago

After finishing this book, the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. Absolutely essential reading.

5
5 out of 5 (17 User reviews )

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