In 1753, Voltaire -- playwright, poet, philosopher, and one of the most
fêted figures in Europe -- was forced by Louis XV into exile, where he
remained for the last twenty-five years of his life. These years
heralded a startling new beginning for this remarkable man. Voltaire
carved out a new and vibrant world in his isolation, becoming a
successful entrepreneur and writing his masterpiece Candide. In Voltaire
in Exile, Ian Davidson re-creates this period in the life of one of the
giants of the Enlightenment. By painstakingly translating the rich
correspondence between Voltaire and his family, members of the Court at
Versailles, and the French intellectual elite, Davidson allows us to
discover Voltaire the artist, the campaigner, the aesthete, the lover,
the humorist. The result is a wonderfully vivid portrait of this
extraordinarily funny, iconoclastic, complex, and, above all,
ferociously intelligent individual.