
audiobook
by Lucien Fabre
LUCIEN FABRE
The opening thrusts listeners into a world of sleek trains and shadowed hotels, where the enigmatic financier Rabevel moves like a chess piece across a board of wealth and desire. A trembling woman clings to him, her love tangled with fear, while he remains detached, measuring every gesture with a cold, almost clinical pleasure. Their brief, charged encounter hints at a marriage built on convenience rather than devotion, setting a tone of quiet manipulation and restless yearning.
In the same breath, Rabevel steps into the bustling offices of a maritime house, negotiating ships and schedules with the same ruthless precision he applies to human relationships. The dialogue crackles with the language of contracts and tides, offering a glimpse of the larger economic webs that will test his ambition. Listeners can expect a slow‑burning portrait of a man whose appetite for power may soon collide with forces—both personal and external—that threaten to upend his calculated empire.
Language
fr
Duration
~6 hours (354K characters)
Release date
2024-09-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1889–1952
An engineer by training and a novelist by instinct, this French writer moved easily between science, industry, and literature. Best known for winning the Prix Goncourt in 1923, he also wrote one of the early French books explaining Einstein’s ideas to general readers.
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