February 1815. Edmond Dantès is nineteen, a sailor on the verge of his first captaincy, about to marry the woman he loves. Three men, for three separate reasons — jealousy, professional envy, and political self-interest — converge their denunciations on the same innocent target. He is taken to the Château d'If, the island fortress in the Bay of Marseille, and the gate closes behind him.
He will not emerge as Edmond Dantès.
In the years of his imprisonment, a wrongly tunneled escape attempt introduces him to the Abbé Faria — an old man, another political prisoner, who will spend thirteen years teaching him mathematics, science, history, philosophy, and five languages, and who will die leaving him the location of a treasure on an island called Monte Cristo and the intellectual formation to make use of it. What Faria bequeaths Dantès is not only wealth. It is the capacity to become anyone.
Alexandre Dumas and his collaborator Auguste Maquet serialized The Count of Monte Cristo in the Journal des Débats from 1844 to 1846, drawing on a documented case of false imprisonment and elaborate revenge that they transformed into something of entirely different scale and ambition: a novel in which the myth of justice denied and justice reclaimed is embedded in the specific history of Napoleonic France, organized around one of the most intricate plots in European fiction, and driven toward a philosophical conclusion darker and more searching than the word "revenge" suggests.
The Count arrives in Paris with unlimited wealth, an impenetrable identity, and a plan so precisely constructed that the three men who destroyed Edmond Dantès will destroy themselves. What he cannot control — what the plan's own success reveals — is how far the destruction spreads, how many people who had no part in the original crime stand in the path of a mechanism designed for justice and operating with the indifference of a force too large for its target. The recognition that even the most justified revenge cannot be administered with the precision that justice requires is what the Count of Monte Cristo, in the end, costs Edmond Dantès.
One of the greatest novels ever written — and one of the most honest about what vengeance, perfectly executed, actually produces.
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Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. The Count of Monte Cristo, written by Alexandre Dumas and first published in 1844, is a sweeping tale of betrayal, vengeance, and redemption. The novel follows Edmond Dantes, a young and idealistic sailor whose life is shattered when he is falsely accused of treason and imprisoned in the grim Chateau d'If. During his years in confinement, Dantes uncovers a hidden fortune on the island of Monte Cristo, setting in motion an elaborate plan to escape, reclaim his freedom, and seek justice against those who wronged him. Upon his release, Dantes reinvents himself as the mysterious and wealthy Count of Monte Cristo. Armed with newfound wealth and influence, he embarks on a meticulously plotted journey of revenge, manipulating the fates of his betrayers with ruthless precision. As he navigates high society, deceit, and moral dilemmas, Dantes faces unexpected challenges that test his humanity and force him to confront the price of vengeance. Dumas' novel is renowned for its vivid characters, intricate plot, and philosophical exploration of justice, forgiveness, and the human desire for retribution. The Count of Monte Cristo remains one of the greatest adventure novels of all time, a timeless classic that examines the transformative power of suffering and the complexities of redemption. This edition preserves Dumas' dramatic storytelling, making it essential reading for fans of classic literature and epic tales of revenge and redemption. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9798345693520
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