Rabevel, ou le mal des ardents, Volume 2 (of 3) : Le financier Rabevel by Fabre
Let's jump back in. Rabevel, Le financier picks up with our man at the peak of his game. He's no longer just a player; he's building his own empire of banks, industries, and political favors. The first book showed us how he climbed; this one shows us what it's like to live on that shaky summit.
The Story
Rabevel is everywhere and nowhere. His name is on deals that reshape the city's skyline, but he operates from shadowy offices and private clubs. The plot weaves through high-stakes investments, tense boardroom battles, and the quiet, desperate struggles of people caught in his financial web. But the higher he flies, the more he has to lose. Old allies become rivals, the press starts sniffing around his methods, and the very system he mastered begins to show cracks. The central question isn't if he'll make more money, but whether the fortress of wealth he's built can protect him from the consequences of how he built it.
Why You Should Read It
What grabbed me was how human Rabevel becomes in this volume. He's not a cartoon villain. Fabre lets us see his doubts, his calculated risks, and the lonely isolation his success creates. You almost root for him, even as you see the collateral damage. The book is a brilliant character study wrapped in a financial thriller. It's less about the math of money and more about its psychology—the addiction to the deal, the paranoia of loss, the hunger for legacy. It makes you think about all the modern 'Rabevels' in the news.
Final Verdict
This is perfect for anyone who loves a deep, slow-burn character drama. If you enjoyed the tense atmosphere of The Godfather or the moral complexities of Mad Men, but set in interwar France, you'll feel right at home. It's not a fast-paced action book; it's a rich, thoughtful, and often tense exploration of power. You'll come away thinking about ambition, success, and the price tags we never see coming. A fantastic middle chapter that leaves you desperate for the finale.
The copyright for this book has expired, making it public property. Access is open to everyone around the world.
Patricia Wilson
2 weeks agoFrom the very first page, it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. I would gladly recommend this title.