A History Geek's Reading Companion

Ep 4. Marseilles in 1815: The World Behind Edmond Dantes

36 min · 22 de feb de 2026
Portada del episodio Ep 4. Marseilles in 1815: The World Behind Edmond Dantes

Descripción

In this episode, we head to Marseille in 1815 and the tumultuous world behind the opening chapters of The Count of Monte Cristo. We walk through the First Restoration, Napoleon’s escape from Elba, and why a ship sailing into the Vieux-Port could feel like a political event, not just "business as usual". By the time Edmond Dantès is arrested, we can see exactly how a nineteen-year-old sailor with a letter from Elba becomes the perfect target for a regime terrified of Bonapartists. For a more detailed analysis with quotes, sources, and extra context you can find my notes on Substack at A History Geek’s Reading Companion: https://theguildedquill.substack.com/ [https://theguildedquill.substack.com/]

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episode Ep 2. Crime & Punishment Part I artwork

Ep 2. Crime & Punishment Part I

In this 2nd episode of The History Geek’s Reading Companion, I go back to Crime and Punishment, a book I first read as a miserable teenager coming off Pride and Prejudice, armed with bad instant coffee and a highlighter. What started as a survival exercise turned into the first time a book really demanded work from me, and I’ve been circling back to it ever since. I'm really interested in answering the question: what kind of Russia creates someone like Raskolnikov? I look at how his psychology is shaped by history...by centuries of serfdom, a messy emancipation that freed people on paper but left them indebted and unmoored, and the rise of the 19th-century intelligentsia: overeducated and underemployed. This is the first part of a 3 part series where I explore specifically the beginning of serfdom and how it evolved up to the 19th-century. I hope you learn something new and feel free to discuss your thoughts in the comments!

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