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Les Imbéciles: A Tale of Vanity, Delusion, and the Coming Storm
Les Imbéciles: A Tale of Vanity, Delusion, and the Coming Storm
In Les Imbéciles: A Tale of Vanity, Delusion, and the Coming Storm, Milton Rothbard paints a dazzling portrait of pre¿Revolutionary France at its most decadent and absurd. The novel opens in 1788, when Paris glitters with perfume, gossip, and denial. Four aristocrats-Count François Petit du Rochambord, Marquis Emmanuelle Lapetite, Duke Guillerme Dumonde, and Baron Maximilien de Beaumont¿Vigny-stumble through nights of wine and self¿importance, convinced their titles will protect them from reality. Their downfall begins at La Fleur de Lys Écorchée, a brothel where four cunning courtesans-Reine¿Marie, Émilie, Victoire, and Claudine-turn seduction into strategy, exposing the men's secrets and ambitions with surgical precision.
Watching from her carriage is Duchesse Marguerite¿Antoinette de La Rivière, ninety¿one years old and sharper than any blade in France. She becomes the novel's moral compass and comic hurricane, determined to save her country not from revolution but from stupidity. As the Duchesse confronts the fools and their deceivers, Rothbard's satire unfolds with wit and elegance: a kingdom collapsing under the weight of its own vanity.
Through lavish banquets, whispered blackmail, and the Duchesse's merciless humor, Les Imbéciles captures the final glitter before the guillotine. It is a story of laughter and ruin, of people who mistake their reflection for the sun-and of one woman who sees the storm coming long before anyone else.
Step into a world of powdered wigs, whispered scandals, and exquisite foolishness. Les Imbéciles is a razor¿sharp tragicomedy of aristocrats dancing on the edge of revolution-where every toast hides a betrayal and every smile conceals a scheme. With the unforgettable Duchesse de La Rivière commanding the stage, Milton Rothbard delivers a masterpiece of satire and style: a glittering mirror held up to human vanity.
A tale of silk and stupidity. Of laughter and ruin. Of a kingdom that mistook its own reflection for the sun.
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