The Red and the Black
Le Rouge et le Noir (The Red and the Black) is a melodramatic novel set in 1830s France relating a young man's hypocritical rise to power, influence and wealth and subsequent fall. The book was written by the 19th century French writer Marie-Henri Beyle, better known as Stendhal. With this book Stendhal has been said to have practically invented the psychological novel.
The Red and the Black is the story of Julien Sorel, son of a sawyer in provincial France, who, through perseverance, duplicity and love manages to climb the social heights to the capital and beyond only to be dragged back down by scandal. The Catholic church acts symmetrically as Juliens door into the higher classes and ultimately as his downfall, as the vehicle of the scandal that eventually engulfs him as he at long last reaches one of his primary goals in life, which is to be accepted into an elite military corps. So why did he begin as a priest-trainee? Napoleon's army, Juliens ideal, has been disbanded for decades, and now the priesthood is the ticket out of the provinces. Julien carefully hides his allegiance to the now politically unpopular Napoleon behind a facade of false piety which as the story eventually shows, cannot fail to betray him.
The story is told mostly through detailed descriptions of the characters states of mind, an unusual technique at the time this novel was written. Few events pass in which we are not treated to a birds-eye view of the mental state of all participants.
A "writer's writer" Stendhal is known more in literary circles than in the public at large. Many writers have acknowledged his influence on their work and used his technique of detailed psychological description in their own stories.