Frédéric
by Joseph Fiévée
About this book
Frédéric, by Joseph Fiévée, is a quietly powerful literary portrait that probes love, duty, and the shifting social codes of post-Revolutionary France. Fiévée’s fiction unfolds with a moral and sentimental acuity rooted in the Year VII of the Republic, when old hierarchies and new freedoms collided and intimate lives were reshaped by public change.
Through reflective narration and finely observed scenes, Frédéric examines the tensions between passion and social expectation, the role of women in a society relearning its virtues, and the ways sensibility and ambition can both elevate and wound. Fiévée’s prose channels contemporary debates about decorum, influence, and the moral imagination, offering readers a window into the cultural aftermath of the Revolution without sacrificing emotional depth or narrative grace. The novel balances social critique with humane character studies, avoiding melodrama while never shirking feeling.
A compelling piece of classic French literature, Frédéric will appeal to listeners who love historical fiction that doubles as social commentary, admirers of subtle character-driven storytelling, and anyone curious about gender, manners, and moral thought at the turn of the 19th century. Listen for the elegant language and the timeless questions it raises about desire, duty, and belonging.
