🧣 Madame Bovary Walks Through My Mountain Village | REVIEW[ENG-ESP]

@marabuzal · 2025-08-24 10:04 · Hive Book Club


[...**Flaubert neither saves her nor condemns her. He lets her be. And that's what makes Madame Bovary great. There's no moral. There's no redemption. There's a woman searching. Who makes mistakes. Falling**...]

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Madame Bovary walks through my mountain village. It's 2025, but she doesn't seem to know it. Her fringed shawl moves in the wind, and her step is firm, as if she's searching for something she hasn't yet found. I see her cross the square, look at the balconies, stop in front of a closed shop window. No one else notices her. But I do. I recognize her. Emma Bovary doesn't belong to this time, but neither does she belong to hers. She's a figure who glides between eras, between unfulfilled desires and vanished promises. In this mountain village, stones hold stories and silence weighs heavily. Emma is an interruption. A reminder.


Flaubert wrote her with precision. Not with love, not with hate. With distance. With the gaze of someone who observes without intervening. She is not a heroine, but neither is she a victim. She is a woman who wants to live beyond what is permitted. Who searches in books for what life denies her. Who falls in love with images, gestures, words that have no body. In 2025, Emma Bovary remains uncomfortable. She doesn't fit into the discourses that simplify. She doesn't let herself be trapped by labels. Her desire is complex. Her sadness has no name. And that makes her real. More real than many figures that wander across our screens, edited, filtered, empty. I see her stop in front of the church. She doesn't enter. She only observes. Perhaps she remembers. Perhaps she waits. Her face shows no emotion, but her eyes hold something, and it burns. It's not nostalgia. It's a hunger that can't be satisfied with bread or caresses. A hunger for meaning, for intensity, for something that lifts her out of herself. Flaubert neither saves her nor condemns her. He lets her be. And that's what makes Madame Bovary great. There is no moral. No redemption. There is a woman searching. Who makes mistakes. Who falls. Who dies. But who, in her fall, reveals something that touches us. Something that makes us uncomfortable. Something that forces us to look.


In this town, the days repeat themselves and the nights are long. Emma walks as if time had no effect on her. As if she knew her story lives on. That there are those who read it. That there are those who still feel it. She is and is not a character, she is and is not a novel. She is a question. A way of looking at the world. Flaubert wrote with obsession. Each sentence was crafted as if it were marble. Each scene has rhythm, weight, silence. There is no excess. There are no embellishments. There is truth. A truth that doesn't scream, but that remains. That stays with the reader and doesn't leave. That transforms. Emma Bovary is not the emptiness that lurks behind the everyday. The dissatisfaction that can't be cured with consumption. The desire that can't be explained. And that, in 2025, remains urgent. It remains necessary. Literature, when it's true, doesn't age. Madame Bovary continues to be read because it continues to say something. Because it continues to touch unchanging chords. Because it continues to show that the human soul cannot be tamed. That there is something in us that searches, that dreams, that breaks. And is reborn. As verses are reborn.


Emma walks through my mountain village. No one stops her. No one calls her. I follow her with my eyes. Not out of curiosity. Not out of nostalgia. But because I know that her step leaves a mark. That her story belongs to me. That her desire, though foreign, calls out to me. And then, when the sun begins to set and the shadows lengthen, Emma stops. She looks toward the horizon. There is no sea. There is no Paris. Only mountains. Only silence. But in her expression, there is something that resists. Something that doesn't give up. Something that, despite everything, continues searching. Madame Bovary walks through my mountain village. It's 2025, and I see her pass by with her fringed shawl and her haughty gaze. She hasn't changed. She hasn't aged. She's only learned to move among us unseen. But I see her.


>"*When I was writing the poisoning of Madame Bovary, I had such a realistic taste of arsenic in my mouth, I was so realistically poisoned myself, that I gave myself two bouts of indigestion one after the other: two real bouts of indigestion, for I vomited everything I had eaten for dinner*." - Gustave Flaubert

en español



Madame Bovary camina por mi pueblo de montaña| RESEÑA

[...**Flaubert ni la salva ni la condena. La deja ser. Y eso es lo que hace grande a Madame Bovary. No hay moraleja. No hay redención. Hay una mujer que busca. Que se equivoca. Que cae**...]

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Madame Bovary camina por mi pueblo de montaña. Es 2025, pero ella no parece saberlo. Su chal de flecos se mueve con el viento, y su paso es firme, como si buscara algo que aún no ha encontrado. La veo cruzar la plaza, mirar los balcones, detenerse frente al escaparate de una tienda cerrada. No hay nadie más que la note. Pero yo sí. Yo la reconozco. Emma Bovary no pertenece a este tiempo, pero tampoco al suyo. Es una figura que se desliza entre épocas, entre deseos que no se cumplen y promesas que se desvanecen. En este pueblo de montaña, las piedras guardan historias y el silencio pesa. Emma es una interrupción. Un recordatorio.


Flaubert la escribió con precisión. No con amor, ni con odio. Con distancia. Con la mirada de quien observa sin intervenir. Noo es una heroína pero tampoco una víctima. Es una mujer que quiere vivir más allá de lo permitido. Que busca en los libros lo que la vida le niega. Que se enamora de imágenes, de gestos, de palabras que no tienen cuerpo. En 2025, Emma Bovary sigue siendo incómoda. No encaja en los discursos que simplifican. No se deja atrapar por etiquetas. Su deseo es complejo. Su tristeza no tiene nombre. Y eso la vuelve real. Más real que muchas figuras que se pasean por nuestras pantallas, editadas, filtradas, vacías. La veo detenerse frente a la iglesia. No entra. Solo observa. Quizás recuerda. Quizás espera. Su rostro no muestra emoción, pero sus ojos tienen algo y arde. No es nostalgia. Es un hambre que no se sacia con pan ni con caricias. Un hambre de sentido, de intensidad, de algo que la saque de sí misma. Flaubert ni la salva ni la condena. La deja ser. Y eso es lo que hace grande a Madame Bovary. No hay moraleja. No hay redención. Hay una mujer que busca. Que se equivoca. Que cae. Que muere. Pero que, en su caída, revela algo que nos toca. Algo que incomoda. Algo que nos obliga a mirar.


En este pueblo, los días se repiten y las noches son largas, Emma camina como si el tiempo no la afectara. Como si supiera que su historia sigue viva. Que hay quienes la leen. Que hay quienes aún la sienten. Ella es y no es un personaje, es y no es una novela. Es una pregunta. Una forma de mirar el mundo. Flaubert escribió con obsesión. Cada frase fue trabajada como si fuera mármol. Cada escena tiene ritmo, peso, silencio. No hay exceso. No hay adornos. Hay verdad. Una verdad que no grita, pero que permanece. Que se queda en el lector y no se va. Que transforma. Emma Bovary no es el vacío que se esconde detrás de lo cotidiano. La insatisfacción que no se cura con consumo. El deseo que no se explica. Y eso, en 2025, sigue siendo urgente. Sigue siendo necesario. La literatura, cuando es verdadera, no envejece. Madame Bovary sigue siendo leída porque sigue diciendo algo. Porque sigue tocando fibras que no cambian. Porque sigue mostrando que el alma humana no se domestica. Que hay algo en nosotros que busca, que sueña, que se rompe. Y renace. Como renacen los versos.


Emma camina por mi pueblo de montaña. Nadie la detiene. Nadie la llama. La sigo con la mirada. No por curiosidad. No por nostalgia. Sino porque sé que su paso deja huella. Que su historia me pertenece. Que su deseo, aunque ajeno, me interpela. Y entonces, cuando el sol comienza a caer y las sombras se alargan, Emma se detiene. Mira hacia el horizonte. No hay mar. No hay París. Solo montañas. Solo silencio. Pero en su gesto hay algo que resiste. Algo que no se rinde. Algo que, a pesar de todo, sigue buscando. Madame Bovary camina por mi pueblo de montaña. Es 2025, y la veo pasar con su chal de flecos y su mirada altiva. No ha cambiado. No ha envejecido. Solo ha aprendido a moverse entre nosotros sin ser vista. Pero yo la veo.


>"*Cuando escribía el envenenamiento de Madame Bovary, tenía de una forma tan realista el sabor del arsénico en la boca, estaba de forma tan realista envenenado yo mismo, que me provoqué dos indigestiones una tras otra: dos indigestiones reales, pues vomité todo lo que había cenado*." - Gustave Flaubert

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📌 © Copyright 2025 *Argenis Osorio*. Todos los derechos reservados/© Copyright 2025 *Argenis Osorio*. All rights reserved 📌 La imagen de la portada es de mi Propiedad. Las otras, inspiradas en pasajes de la novela y creadas en Gemini IA/The cover image is my property. The others are inspired by passages from the novel and created in Gemini AI./ 📌 Mi idioma nativo es el español, traduzco al inglés con Google Translation /My native language is Spanish, I translate to English with Google Translation

*Soy autor de los libros de Narrativa: Convite de Cenizas (2002), Tras la piel (2004), En este lado de la muerte (2014), El orden natural de las cosas (2015), La Sangre del Marabú (2020), La Sexta Caballería de Kansas (2024) y La Nada Infinita (2024)*

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