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

(6 User reviews)   1582
By Donna Ferrari Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Timeless Reads
Fabre, Lucien, 1889-1952 Fabre, Lucien, 1889-1952
French
Got a taste for financial sharks and old-school drama? Check out *Rabevel, Volume 2: Le financier Rabevel*. Pierre Rabevel goes from slick talker to banking boss, but the shine comes with a dark cost. This book tracks him bulldozing through post-WWI France—cutthroat deals, secret love affairs, and enemies waiting in the wings. The big question is whether he'll hold on to what he's built or watch his empire collapse. If you liked *The Wolf of Wall Street* or *House of Cards*, you’ll dig this. It feels like a bold HBO series set in twenties Paris, full of mystery and high stakes. Ready to follow a ruthless banker on his climb? Read it.
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'Rabevel, ou le mal des ardents' might be a head-scratcher of a title, but the action inside makes total sense once you crack the cover. In Volume 2: *Le financier Rabevel*, Pierre Rabevel decides he's done playing games. He leaves behind the shadows of family drama and unsolved secrets to build his own financial empire in roaring Paris.

The Story

The year is in the 1920s, and France is buzzing with possibilities. Pierre Rabevel—half dreamer, half con artist—throws himself into banking. He gets involved with some old friends, makes new enemies, and finds a woman who could be his anchor. But with each brilliant deal, someone pays a heavy price. Rabevel might talk about building a better world using cash and charisma, but his soul is becoming a museum of his mistakes.

Behind the big offices and fancy parties, a darker plot simmers. That old 'mal des ardents' vibe means dark fires in the heart—either ambition that twists him, or a hidden threat that could break him. Meanwhile, an improbable love story threatens to take him down. The question is, what happens when you mix hubris, old money, and a burning desire to prove yourself? Answers appear… with interest.

Why You Should Read It

This book doesn't feel like 'history class.' It reads like binge-reading a drama on your phone while it's raining outside. I love how Lucien Fabre writes heroes that are flawed—no knights or perfect princesses here. Rabevel is a scoundrel. Yet you root for him because he wants so damn badly. He's bankrupt inside from all his lies.

I also like seeing France between two world wars—still elegant on the surface, but industrial and cutthroat under the cloth napkins. Banking terms are easy to gloss over, but Fabre makes confusion about trades turn into heart-pounding moments of 'did he really dump shares?!' That craft helps even non-finance people love the story.

And! The women in his life are smart cookies, not puppets. Expect clever matches and jealous quarrels that call more from your emotions than your wallet.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history buffs, finance junkies, or someone craving a story like 'The Great Gatsby' meets 'Scarface' with an espresso. At around ~160 pages maybe expected for a volume part old school scan (easy on the commute), this novel digs hard on greed, growth, and disgrace. Quick enough for leisure, smart enough to keep you thinking. Great for anyone who wants some 1920s cigar lounge talk in their heart while your real world moves at warp speed. Each move Rabevel makes on these pages will switch on something in your own drive—just be careful who you trust.



✅ No Rights Reserved

This text is dedicated to the public domain. You do not need permission to reproduce this work.

Richard White
3 months ago

It took me a while to process the complex ideas here, but the argument presented in the middle section is particularly compelling. Highly recommended for those seeking credible information.

Susan Garcia
10 months ago

The analytical framework presented is both innovative and robust.

Jessica Lopez
2 years ago

The citations provided are a goldmine for further academic study.

Paul White
2 months ago

Having read the author's previous works, the nuanced approach to the central theme was better than I expected. I feel much more confident in my knowledge after finishing this.

Linda Davis
1 month ago

The research depth is palpable from the very first chapter.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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