Rabevel, ou le mal des ardents, Volume 2 (of 3) : Le financier Rabevel by Fabre

(9 User reviews)   1691
Fabre, Lucien, 1889-1952 Fabre, Lucien, 1889-1952
French
Okay, so you know how you think historical fiction is all fancy balls and polite conversation? Forget that. 'Rabevel, ou le mal des ardents, Volume 2: Le financier Rabevel' is the gritty, sweaty, and absolutely fascinating flip side. We're back in 16th-century France, but this isn't about kings and queens—it's about money, power, and the man who controls the flow of both. Our guy, Rabevel, is now the king's financier, the ultimate money man. But here's the hook: the 'mal des ardents'—the 'sickness of the fervent'—isn't just a plague ravaging the poor. It's a metaphor for the burning ambition and corruption that's eating away at the wealthy elite, and Rabevel is right in the middle of it. This book asks the real question: what's more contagious, a physical disease or the relentless hunger for wealth and status? If you like your history with a dose of financial intrigue and moral complexity, this is your next read.
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Lucien Fabre's second volume of the Rabevel trilogy picks up the thread of ambition and pulls it taut. We leave the wider world-building of the first book to zoom in on the man himself, Rabevel, now entrenched as the indispensable financier to the French crown.

The Story

Rabevel has climbed the ladder. He's no longer just a clever outsider; he's the banker who funds wars, manages royal debt, and essentially keeps the kingdom's lights on. But with great power comes a target on your back. The novel follows him as he navigates a treacherous court filled with jealous nobles, skeptical clergy, and rival money men who all want a piece of his influence. All the while, the literal plague—the 'mal des ardents'—sweeps through the lower classes, serving as a constant, grim backdrop to the financial and political sickness infecting the powerful. The central drama isn't a battle, but a series of tense negotiations, secret deals, and the psychological toll of living in a gilded cage of his own making.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was how modern this all feels. Swap out the doublets for suits, and Rabevel's story could be about a Wall Street titan or a tech mogul. Fabre makes high finance in the 1500s incredibly readable. You feel the pressure Rabevel is under, the constant calculation, and the isolation that comes with being the 'necessary evil' everyone relies on but nobody truly likes. He's not a hero, but he's compellingly human—flawed, brilliant, and increasingly aware of the moral cost of his success. The book brilliantly uses the physical plague to mirror the spiritual decay among the elite.

Final Verdict

This isn't a breezy beach read. It's for you if you love character-driven historical fiction that goes beyond the battlefield and into the boardroom (or, in this case, the counting house). Perfect for readers who enjoyed the political machinations of Hilary Mantel's Thomas Cromwell or the detailed, immersive worlds of Neal Stephenson. You'll need to have read Volume 1 to fully appreciate the journey, but if you're up for a smart, slow-burn story about the price of power, Le financier Rabevel pays off in spades.



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Liam Wilson
1 year ago

To be perfectly clear, the character development leaves a lasting impact. I learned so much from this.

Richard Lee
1 year ago

Without a doubt, the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Exceeded all my expectations.

Jackson Ramirez
11 months ago

I was skeptical at first, but the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Don't hesitate to start reading.

Christopher Torres
1 year ago

The fonts used are very comfortable for long reading sessions.

Barbara Thomas
11 months ago

Five stars!

5
5 out of 5 (9 User reviews )

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