The Count of Monte Cristo (Everyman's Library)
The Count of Monte Cristo (Everyman's Library) book cover

The Count of Monte Cristo (Everyman's Library)

Hardcover – June 2, 2009

Price
$28.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
1240
Publisher
Everyman's Library
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307271129
Dimensions
5.4 x 2.2 x 8.3 inches
Weight
2.33 pounds

Description

“A piece of perfect storytelling.” —Robert Louis Stevenson Alexandre Dumas was born in 1802 in France and died in 1870. Umberto Eco is the author of The Name of the Rose and Foucault’s Pendulum. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter ION FEBRUARY 24, 1815, the watchtower at Marseilles signaled the arrival of the three-master Pharaon, coming from Smyrna, Trieste and Naples.The quay was soon covered with the usual crowd of curious onlookers, for the arrival of a ship is always a great event in Marseilles, especially when, like the Pharaon, it has been built, rigged and laden in the city and belongs to a local shipowner.Meanwhile the vessel was approaching the harbor under topsails, jib and foresail, but so slowly and with such an air of melancholy that the onlookers, instinctively sensing misfortune, began to wonder what accident could have happened on board. However, the experienced seamen among them saw that if there had been an accident, it could not have happened to the ship herself, for she had every appearance of being under perfect control. Standing beside the pilot, who was preparing to steer the Pharaon through the narrow entrance of the harbor, was a young man who, with vigilant eyes and rapid gestures, watched every movement of the ship and repeated each of the pilot's orders.The vague anxiety hovering over the crowd affected one man so much that he could not wait until the ship entered the harbor: he leaped into a small boat and ordered the boatman to row him out to meet the Pharaon.When he saw this man coming toward him, the young sailor left his post beside the pilot and walked over to the side of the ship, holding his hat in his hand. He was a tall, slender young man, no more than twenty years old, with dark eyes and hair as black as ebony. His whole manner gave evidence of that calmness and resolution peculiar to those who have been accustomed to facing danger ever since their childhood."Ah, it's you, Dantès!" cried the man in the boat. "What's happened? Why does everything look so gloomy on board?""A great misfortune, Monsieur Morrel!" replied the young man. "We lost our brave Captain Leclère off Civitavecchia.""What about the cargo?" asked the shipowner eagerly."It arrived safely, Monsieur Morrel, and I think you'll be satisfied on that score, but poor Captain Leclère--""What happened to him?" asked the shipowner, visibly relieved."He died of brain fever, in horrible agony. He's now at rest off the Isle of II Giglio, sewed up in his hammock with one cannon ball at his head and another at his feet." The young man smiled sadly and added, "How ironic-he waged war against the English for ten long years and then died in his bed like anyone else.""Well, we're all mortal," said the shipowner, "and the old must make way for the young, otherwise there would be no promotion."As they were passing the Round Tower, the young sailor called out, "Make ready to lower topsails, foresail and jib!" The order was executed as smartly as on board a man-of-war. "Lower away and brail all!" At this last order all the sails were lowered and the ship's speed became almost imperceptible."And now, if you'd like to come aboard, Monsieur Morrel," said Dantès, seeing the shipowner's impatience, "you can talk to your purser, Monsieur Danglars, who's just coming out of his cabin. He can give you all the information you want. As for myself, I must look after the anchoring and dress the ship in mourning."The shipowner did not wait to be invited twice. He grasped the line which Dantès threw to him and, with an agility that would have done credit to a sailor, climbed up the ladder attached to the ship's side. Dantès returned to his duties, while Danglars came out to meet Monsieur Morrel. The purser was a man of twenty-five or twenty-six with a rather melancholy face, obsequious to his superiors and arrogant to his subordinates. He was as much disliked by the crew as Edmond Dantès was liked by them."Well, Monsieur Morrel," said Danglars, "I suppose you've heard about our misfortune.""Yes, I have. Poor Captain Leclère! He was a brave and honorable man.""And an excellent seaman, too, grown old between the sky and the water, as a man should be when he's entrusted with the interests of such an important firm as Morrel and Son.""But," said the shipowner, watching Dantès preparing to drop anchor, "it seems to me a man doesn't have to be old to do his work well, Danglars. Our friend Edmond there doesn't look as though he needs advice from anyone.""Yes," said Danglars, casting Dantès a glance full of hatred, "he's young and he has no doubts about anything. As soon as the captain was dead he took command without consulting anyone, and he made us lose a day and a half at the Isle of Elba instead of coming straight back to Marseilles.""As for taking command," said the shipowner, "it was his duty as first mate, but he was wrong to waste a day and a half at the Isle of Elba, unless the ship needed some sort of repairs.""The ship was as sound as I am and as I hope you are, Monsieur Morrel. Wasting that day and a half was nothing but a whim of his; he just wanted to go ashore for a while, that's all.""Dantès," said Morrel, turning toward the young man, "come here, please.""Excuse me, sir, I'll be with you in a moment," said Dantès. Then, turning to the crew, he called out, "Let go!" The anchor dropped immediately and the chain rattled noisily. Dantès walked over to Morrel."I wanted to ask you why you stopped at the Isle of Elba.""It was to carry out an order from Captain Leclère. As he was dying he gave me a package to deliver to Marshal Bertrand there.""Did you see him, Edmond?""Yes."Morrel looked around and drew Dantès off to one side. "How is the emperor?" he asked eagerly."He's well, as far as I could tell. He came into the marshal's room while I was there.""Did you talk to him?""No, he talked to me," said Dantès, smiling."What did he say?""He asked me about the ship, when it had left for Marseilles, what route it had taken and what cargo it was carrying. I think that if the ship had been empty and I had been its owner he would have tried to buy it from me, but I told him I was only the first mate and that it belonged to the firm of Morrel and Son. 'I know that firm,' he said. 'The Morrels have been shipowners for generations and there was a Morrel in my regiment when I was garrisoned at Valence.' ""That's true!" exclaimed Morrel, delighted. "It was Policar Morrel, my uncle. He later became a captain." Then, giving Dantès a friendly tap on the shoulder, he said, "You were quite right to follow Captain Leclère's instructions and stop at the Isle of Elba, although you might get into trouble if it became known that you gave the marshal a package and spoke to the emperor.""How could it get me into trouble?" asked Dantès. "I don't even know what was in the package, and the emperor only asked me the same questions he would have asked any other newcomer. But excuse me for a moment, sir; I see the health and customs officers coming on board."Danglars stepped up as the young man walked away. "Well," he said, "he seems to have given you some good reasons for his stopover.""He gave me excellent reasons, Monsieur Danglars.""That's good; it's always painful to see a friend fail to do his duty.""Dantès did his duty well," replied the shipowner. "It was Captain Leclère, who ordered the stopover.""Speaking of Captain Leclère, didn't Dantès give you a letter from him?""No. Was there one?""I thought Captain Leclère gave him a letter along with the package.""What package, Danglars?""Why, the one Dantès delivered to the Isle of Elba.""How do you know he delivered a package there?"Danglars flushed. "The captain's door was ajar when I was passing by," he said, "and I saw him give Dantès a package and a letter.""He didn't say anything to me about it, but if he has the letter I'm sure he'll give it to me."Danglars was silent for a moment, then he said, "Monsieur Morrel, please don't mention it to Dantès; I must have been mistaken."Just then Dantès returned and Danglars walked away."Well, Dantès, have you finished now?""Yes, sir.""Then will you come to dinner with us?""Please excuse me, Monsieur Morrel, but I think I owe my first visit to my father. Just the same, I'm grateful for the honor of your invitation.""You're right, Dantès. You're a good son. But we'll be expecting you after you've visited your father.""Excuse me again, Monsieur Morrel, but after that first visit there's another one that's equally important to me.""Oh, yes; I was forgetting that there's someone who must be waiting for you as impatiently as your father-the beautiful Mercédès. You're a lucky man, Edmond, and you have a very pretty mistress.""She's not my mistress, sir," said the young sailor gravely. "She's my fiancée.""That's sometimes the same thing," said Morrel, laughing."Not with us, sir," replied Dantès."Well, I won't keep you any longer; you've taken care of my affairs so well that I want to give you as much time as possible to take care of your own. Do you have anything else to tell me?""No.""Didn't Captain Leclère give you a letter for me before he died?""He was unable to write, sir. But that reminds me that I must ask you for two weeks' leave.""To get married?""First of all; and then to go to Paris.""Very well, take as long as you like, Dantès. It will take at least six weeks to unload the cargo, and we won't be ready to put to sea again before another three months or so. But in three months you'll have to be here. The Pharaon," continued the shipowner, patting the young sailor on the shoulder, "can't leave without her captain.""Without her captain!" cried Dantès, his eyes flashing with joy. "Do you really intend to make me captain of the Pharaon?""If I were alone, my dear Dantès, I'd shake your hand and say, 'It's done.' But I have a partner, and you know the Italian proverb, 'He who has a partner has a master.' The thing is at least half done, though, since you already have one vote out of two. Leave it to me to get you the other one; I'll do my best.""Oh, Monsieur Morrel!" cried Dantès, grasping the ship-owner's hand with tears in his eyes. "I thank you in the name of my father and of Mercédès.""That's all right, Edmond. Go see your father, go see Mercedes, then come back to see me.""Don't you want me to take you ashore?""No, thanks; I'll stay on board and look over the accounts with Danglars. Were you satisfied with him during the trip?""That depends on how you mean the question, sir. If you're asking me if I was satisfied with him as a comrade, the answer is no; I think he's disliked me ever since the day we had a little quarrel and I was foolish enough to suggest that we stop for ten minutes at the Isle of Monte Cristo to settle it, a suggestion which I was wrong to make and which he was right to refuse. But if you're speaking of him as a purser, I think there's nothing to be said against him and that you'll be quite satisfied with the way he's done his work.""If you were captain of the Pharaon, would you be glad to keep him?""Whether I'm captain or first mate, Monsieur Morrel," replied Dantès. "I'll always have great respect for those who have the confidence of my shipowners.""Good, good, Dantès! I see you're a fine young man in every way. But don't let me hold you back any longer-I can see how anxious you are to leave.""May I take your skiff?""Certainly.""Good-bye, Monsieur Morrel, and thank you from the bottom of my heart."The young sailor leaped into the skiff and sat down in the stern, giving orders to be rowed to the Canebière. Smiling, the shipowner watched him until he saw him jump ashore, after which he was immediately swallowed up in the crowd. When he turned around, Morrel saw Danglars standing behind him, also following the young sailor's movements. But there was a great difference in the expression of the two men as they both watched Edmond Dantès. -- Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Dumas’s epic novel of justice, retribution, and self-discovery—one of the most enduringly popular adventure tales ever written—in a newly revised translation.
  • This beloved novel tells the story of Edmond Dantès, wrongfully imprisoned for life in the supposedlyimpregnable sea fortress, the Château d’If. After a daring escape, and after unearthing a hidden treasure revealed to him by a fellow prisoner, he devotes the rest of his life to tracking down and punishing the enemies who wronged him.Though a brilliant storyteller, Dumas was given to repetitions and redundancies; this slightly streamlined version of the original 1846 English translation speeds the narrative flow while retaining most of the rich pictorial descriptions and all the essential details of Dumas’s intricately plotted and thrilling masterpiece.Everyman's Library pursues the highest production standards, printing on acid-free cream-colored paper, with full-cloth cases with two-color foil stamping, decorative endpapers, silk ribbon markers, European-style half-round spines, and a full-color illustrated jacket. Everyman’s Library Classics include an introduction, a select bibliography, and a chronology of the author's life and times.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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15%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Conflicting/Wrong information in product description

Although the product description describes this version as "streamlined" the page count implies this is the unabridged version. The product I received is only 500 pages - the abridged version.
28 people found this helpful
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Definitely better unabridged

I read an abridgement of Count of Monte Cristo several years ago and enjoyed it immensely but wondered what I had missed. Later after I discovered Everyman's beautiful editions I searched their titles on their website and found they had nothing by Dumas. I wrote them a letter suggesting that they publish some.

Apparently, enough people wrote in: They published what I feel to be his best novel. As soon as I was aware of it I obtained one of my own. As I expected the unabridged version was far better.

Another reviewer said that the translation in this edition was one of the worst. I didn't notice it if it was. The story flowed and held my interest so that I could not put it down for the last third. It's definitely one I will go back and read again.

The Everyman's edition is just beautiful with creamy paper, cloth cover and sewn binding. I carried it around with me in the few days it took me to read it.

If you buy it from Amazon you will save a significant chunk of change. It's much spendier in the bookstores.

I do hope they will publish more Dumas.
12 people found this helpful
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Everyone Should Read This

It's a great book. It deals with how disposable anyone can be when they, even accidentally, become an inconvenience to powerful people. And it also shows that even if one is vindicated, the people who betray you can probably be never made to feel badly about it; and thus, the book shows that total revenge is impossible and needlessly destructive. Also, in a way, there is a lesson that total vindication of one's self is probably not possible, because to even seek the vindication, one has to become a different person. Once one is betrayed, there's no way to "win" in the way one might hope.
9 people found this helpful
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The Count of Monte Cristo is one of the greatest of all adventure novels

The Count of Monte Cristo is one of Alexandre Dumas pere's greatest creations. The story of the French sailor
Edmond Dantes who is falsely accused of treason against the government of Louis XVIII is fascinating and readable.
The Everyman edition runs to over 1100 pages but keeps the attention of the reader. We see how Cristo escaped prison and obtained a vast treasure horde on the advice of his fellow prisoner a clergyman. We then see how he wrought revenge against the three men who had plotted his downfall. Along the way there are many other characters with tales to tell of their own. This is great novel whose cinematic pace makes for many hours of reading pleasure. Highly recommended. A true classic of French Romanticism.
8 people found this helpful
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Beautiful as I remember it!

I first read this book when I was in my early teens and, as expected, I was just fascinated by it. So much so, that I started reading everything “Dumas” I could put my hands on, to the point that I got so fed up with this writer I vowed never to read anything written by him ever again… But then, finding the above pictured version (with the enticing introduction by Umberto Eco), I decided to give it another try and see how I would feel about it decades and decades later. Starting to read it with a bias opinion, I slowly began falling in love with it all over again. I rediscovered Dumas’ sophisticated writing style (far superior to many contemporary writers), his complex plots and mysterious characters, his almost perfect structure of a novel.
Wrongly accused and unfairly imprisoned, Edmond Dantes will spend the best years of his life incarcerated at Chateau D’If, where we can see his evolution from a young and naïve chap in his prime to a mature, serious and even cruel man, seeking revenge against all who wronged him. It is in this prison where he meets the abbe Faria, his mentor, the one who will not only open his eyes and help him solve the mystery of his imprisonment but will transform him into a scholar and a man of letters. It is thanks to abbe Faria that Dantes manages to, not only keep his sanity, but escape that death trap and, ultimately, find wealth, fame and fulfill his thirst for revenge.
This book is really many-splendored things: it is not only about its complex characters and the unique situations they live, it is also a homage to the era it depicts, including the fashion, the customs, the manners, the high society with its carnivals and balls, the political distress of the epoque, the banking system, the arranged marriages, the military and justice system, etc. etc. “The Count of Monte Cristo” is a true literary masterpiece: a story about deceive, desperation, hope, ambition, redemption, revenge and, of course, love. And everything is masterfully crafted in Dumas’ unique style, where he doesn’t just form sentences to express an action, he paints a picture in vivid colors. For example, Dumas does not just simply say that the count is looking with interest at a picture, but “he is busy examining [this] portrait with no less care that he had bestowed upon the other”; he is not just seeing an old man, but “reads on the careworn, pale feature of [that person] a whole history of secret grief written in each wrinkle time had planted there”, etc. etc.
Still, Dumas’ insatiable romantic style is reflected throughout the entire book: some reactions are rushed and extreme, his characters move from tears, to paleness, to trembling, to tears again within one sentence; his protagonists are animated by the same passionate, impulsive and unrealistic love and enthusiasm that sometimes make these scenes puerile in description and illustration. But, all in all, this book is a delight to read. As said before, I personally recommend the version pictured above, in the “Every Man’s Library” collection, as it has a beautiful introduction signed by the great Umberto Eco, one of my absolute favorite writers.
6 people found this helpful
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Great Edition

It's very hard to find an unabridged version of this work and I had to wait a few years until this particular version came out...although even here there is some abridgement to eliminate repetition from the manner the story was originally written. I was very happy when it did. As a commentator noted [[ASIN:0140449264 The Count of Monte Cristo (Penguin Classics)]] is the authoritative fully unabridged edition although it's in paperback. It's a classic story of the era - if you've never read this or heard of this story, it's classic.

In my mind its very similar to Les Miserables and Great Expectations. There's the hero who gets beaten down, then he rises up, gets helped by a benefactor, and then proceeds to get some revenge: its a dish best served cold :-)

This edition is wonderfully bound just like all the Everyman Library Editions. It comes with a dustjacket which is nice and it's a thick book.

I highly recommend reading this by a fireplace in winter with some wine and cheese.

Enjoy
6 people found this helpful
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Beautiful book

It's the perfect length and the book looks beautiful. The hardcover and the book mark strap are great. This book was in beautiful condition and an excellent read! You definitely should buy this as opposed to the full version because it cuts out a lot of the repetition that Alexandre Dumas seems to do. Great book!
5 people found this helpful
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Very poor translation

The earlier reviews of this translation of Alexandre Dumas book indicated that it was a recent translation and converted the convoluted text into passable English. Dumas was if not paid by the word for his work then he was certainly paid by the line. This translation is almost a verbatim translation with all of the clumsiness of that style of writing.
I cannot recommend this book, even though it is a one of very few hardcover versions, Everyman's Library should withdraw it from sale.
I plan on re-writing it myself into acceptable English so that the world may have a version that is readable. The world deserves a better version of this tale.
4 people found this helpful
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First impressions

I'm only about 225 pages into the book so far and have no regrets about buying it. The story is wonderful, not the kind of thing you'd want to rush through but just take your time and enjoy. My only surprise is that this edition was advertised as being "Deckle Edge Paper" whereas my copy is definitely not. You're paying more for this version so if that is important to you beware.
3 people found this helpful
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Fantastic- Well worth the read!

The Count of Monte Cristo is the greatest book ever written. The unabridged version in hardcover is the best way to go. I had a trade paperback version but it fell apart during the second reading. I've read this hard cover version at least six times and it is holding up very well. Now about the book- I love the story, the way it is written and all the intertwined side stories that make the main plot all the more intriguing. I get something more every time I read it. It holds a permanent place on my night stand. You will not be disappointed reading this book. It is more than a five star rated book!
3 people found this helpful