Young Candide is ejected from his idyllic life in a protected castle
and finds himself encountering wild adventures and harsh trials that put
to the test his teacher's claim that we live in the best of all possible
worlds.
Honest and simple to a fault, Candide finds that a bit of romance leads
only to exile and sudden immersion in a larger and more frightening
world. Armed with the optimistic teachings of his mentor Pangloss, he is
soon astounded to be arrested, beaten and forced into military service.
The author doesn't spare his hero, hurling him into a shipwreck, an
earthquake, a tidal wave and a city-wide wildfire in short order.
Pursuing his true love and reunited with Pangloss, who interprets each
new setback, no matter how horrific, as another sign that everything
happens for the best, Candide refuses to abandon hope but begins to
question his teacher's bottomless optimism. An outrageous picaresque
quest full of barbed observations about human behavior and belief,
politics and institutions, Candide was condemned for the fiercely
irreverent stance it delicately conceals beneath its hero's guileless
nature and chain of extravagant adventures. Triumphing over censorship,
the book has had profound influence on philosophy and politics since its
first appearance in 1759, but remains a classic that can be read for
pure pleasure.
With an eye-catching new cover, and professionally typeset manuscript,
this edition of Candide is both modern and readable.