Jacht naar Fortuin by Émile Zola
Émile Zola’s Jacht naar Fortuin (known in English as Money) is a powerhouse of a novel. It drops you right into the heart of 19th-century Paris, a city buzzing with new money and wild dreams.
The Story
The book follows Aristide Saccard, a financial schemer with a brilliant and dangerous idea: he wants to launch a company to build a railway across the Middle East. To fund this colossal project, he creates the Universal Bank. We watch as he uses charm, manipulation, and sheer audacity to attract investors from every corner of society—from wide-eyed small savers to corrupt politicians. The stock price of his bank soars on hype and hope, creating paper millionaires overnight. But Saccard’s empire is built on speculation, not solid ground. The story becomes a tense waiting game. Will his grand vision become reality, or will the whole glittering structure come crashing down when people realize what it’s truly built on?
Why You Should Read It
What grabbed me wasn't just the plot, but how chillingly familiar it feels. Zola isn’t just writing about 1860s France; he’s writing about human nature. Saccard is a fantastic character—you swing between being impressed by his energy and horrified by his ruthlessness. The rush of the stock exchange, the frenzy of a rising market, the panic of a crash—Zola makes you feel it all. It’s a stark look at how greed can blind an entire society. But it’s not all doom; there’s a crazy energy to the whole thing that makes it impossible to put down. You keep reading just to see how high the balloon will go before it pops.
Final Verdict
This book is perfect for anyone who loves a gripping story about power and ambition. If you enjoyed the cutthroat business drama of shows like Succession or novels about financial madness, you’ll feel right at home. It’s also a great pick for historical fiction readers who want to understand the forces that shaped our modern world. Fair warning: it might make you look at the stock market pages a little differently. A brilliant, exciting, and surprisingly relevant classic.
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Donald Clark
3 months agoBased on the summary, I decided to read it and the emotional weight of the story is balanced perfectly. One of the best books I've read this year.
David Davis
8 months agoPerfect.
James Walker
1 year agoEssential reading for students of this field.
Ashley Williams
4 months agoThe index links actually work, which is rare!
Mark Wilson
8 months agoI had low expectations initially, however the character development leaves a lasting impact. Absolutely essential reading.