Bel-Ami by Guy de Maupassant
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
A lot of times books from the early 20th century and before get a bad rap for being dry, too long, and told in excruciating detail. This is the rare one that is nothing like that. Sure, here and there Maupassant puts in details that would have been relevant at the time—historical details relevant to his newspaper job—but those are in the minority. Overall, this is a fast-paced and pretty shocking book for the period. It includes more details than would normally be given at that time about the main character’s relationships with women, and it’s very straight forward about them. Rare for 1885!
My favorite thing is the way Maupassant shows over the course of the book how the main character, George Duroy, changes drastically over time in a believable way. It’s the classic story of how more is never enough, and Duroy’s journey from pauper to powerful and rich is brilliantly told, never skipping over the risks he takes or how his mind changes from relatively naive to very cunning, from wishful to entitled.
I highly recommend this book!
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