
THE MONOMANIAC - (LA BÊTE HUMAINE) - By ÉMILE ZOLA - Translated and Edited, with a Preface By EDWARD VIZETELLY - London HUTCHINSON & CO Paternoster Row. 1901
PREFACE
Set against the humming steel of France’s railway lines, the story follows Jacques Lantier, a talented locomotive engineer whose life is haunted by an unsettling obsession. Beneath his steady hand on the controls lies a dark, compulsive urge that surfaces whenever a woman catches his eye, threatening to drive him toward acts he cannot control. As the trains race between Paris and Le Havre, Jacques must wrestle with this inner demon while navigating the ordinary demands of his job.
Around him swirl vivid characters—a frightened Séverine whose sudden cry sparks terror, a pragmatic magistrate exposing the harshness of the legal system, and the determined Madame Lebleu, whose curiosity borders on the daring. Zola paints the railway world with meticulous detail, from bustling stations to the roar of engines, while also probing the moral ambiguities of love, fate, and the relentless march of industrial progress. The novel invites listeners into a tense, atmospheric portrait of a man teetering on the brink of his own destruction.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (764K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Clare Graham & Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
Release date
2018-04-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1902
A fearless French novelist who turned ordinary lives into gripping fiction, he helped define literary naturalism and gave the world classics like Germinal and Thérèse Raquin. His writing was never just about story—it was also a way of confronting injustice head-on.
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