A Master of Political Survival In this penetrating psychological portrait, Stefan Zweig brings to life one of history's most enigmatic figures—Joseph Fouché, the man who served every French regime from the Revolution through Napoleon's empire with cunning adaptability. Fouché was the ultimate political chameleon: a regicide who became a duke, a revolutionary who served emperors, a man who wielded power from the shadows while others fell to the guillotine or battlefield. Through Zweig's masterful prose, we witness how this former priest transformed himself into Napoleon's indispensable spymaster, survived the Terror, and manipulated the fate of nations through an intricate web of intelligence and betrayal. With his trademark insight into the human psyche, Zweig reveals how Fouché's genius lay not in ideology but in his uncanny ability to read the shifting winds of power. Here is a timeless study of political opportunism, survival, and the dark arts of statecraft—a portrait of a man who understood that in politics, principles are luxuries only the doomed can afford. A brilliant exploration of power, pragmatism, and the price of political survival.