Out of Bohemia: A Story of Paris Student-Life
Gertrude Christian Fosdick
Lu par Expatriate





Beryl Carrington is a naïve young American artist following her ideals to Paris, where she meets three young men, all also artists and all in love with her. Georges is French-American and a bit wild, with a French mistress on the side. Clayton is a true-hearted human being as well as a single-minded painter, with room for little in his life besides Art. Harold is more of a bourgeois Bohemian, coming from upper-class New York society but also a gifted and devoted painter with dreams of greatness. It’s not at all clear which (if any) of the three Beryl will choose. This simple fin de siècle romance is not as simple as it appears, delineating the conflicts between social classes, between “innocent” America and “licentious,” “giddy” Paris, between the independence of men and the dependence of women in that era, even of bold women trying to carve out a place for themselves in the artistic world. (Summary by Expatriate) (3 hr 38 min)
Chapitres
Introduction | 13:53 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part I | 22:19 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 01 | 11:08 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 02 | 11:29 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 03 | 9:39 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 04 | 7:30 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 05 | 8:02 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 06 | 6:26 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 07 | 9:22 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 08 | 16:32 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 09 | 8:01 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 10 | 16:05 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 11 | 9:00 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 12 | 7:06 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 13 | 5:20 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 14 | 5:11 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 15 | 11:40 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 16 | 8:29 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 17 | 12:23 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 18 | 7:17 | Lu par Expatriate |
Part II, Chapter 19 | 11:37 | Lu par Expatriate |