Little known in this country, The Belly of Paris (Le Ventre de Paris) is one of Emile Zola's most descriptive, humorous, and exciting fictions. In this novel the author of Germinal,
L'Assommoir, Nan, and Therese Raquin chooses as his locale the newly-built food markets of Paris. Into this extravagance of food - which Zola describes in set pieces that wet the tongue, excite
the ear, and stir up the belly - he places his young hero, the half-starved Florent, who has just escaped imprisonment in Cayenne. Florent finds himself at odds with a world he now knows is
unjust. Gradually he takes up with the local Socialists, who are more at home in bars than on the revolutionary streets.