The 2019 edition of my Pulitzer challenge is off to a swashbuckling start with The Black Count: Glory, Betrayal, Redemption, and the Real Life Count Of Monte Cristo by Tom Reiss. A 2012 winner, Reiss had been influenced by his mother’s tattered copy of El Comte de Monte-Cristo, a copy she brought to the United States from France when she fled Nazi Europe. Reiss grew up in a household where the tales written by Alexandre Dumas were family favorites and each tale a treasured treat. Years later Reiss became a historian, starting with the Orientalist that gained international acclaim. His thoughts and research turned back to Dumas and his heroine Edouard Dantes and the stories he grew up reading. Determined to learn the identity of the real life Count, Reiss spent ten years researching the his identity and the result was an award winning tale of racial identity and political intrigue in early republican France.
Alexandre Dumas was born circa 1759 on the island of Sante-Domingue to Antoine Alexandre Davy de Pailleterie and his wife the freed slave Marie Cessette Dumas. During the second half of eighteenth century while racial politics were not widely discussed, Americans, as blacks were known on French soil, enjoyed more rights in France and her territories than in most other places in the Western Hemisphere. Antoine Pailleterie was a marquis for many generations yet experienced a rivalry with his brother Charles for the family’s land and holdings. Yet, the family was destitute, having survived poor sugar harvests and business decisions on Sante-Domingue. When Alexandre Dumas arrived in France at age fourteen, he took the surname of his mother, denouncing his marquis family now in turmoil. Despite some laws racial prejudicial laws existing in France, Dumas was free and spent his teenage years prior to the revolution in Paris, where he was influenced by French culture and attempted to school himself in the ways of a young Count, making up for lost time. Yet, what interested the young Dumas the most was swordsmanship. On the dawn of the revolution, he had become an accomplished fencer and horseback rider, and at six feet tall and swarthy, presented himself as quite a contrast to the majority of Frenchmen of his age.
During the revolution, Alexandre Dumas entered the French army but not as an officer befitting of a marquis but as an unranked officer. Knowing that he had to attain the rank of sergeant in order to win his future wife Marie-Louise Labouret’s hand in marriage, young Dumas embodied the French spirit of fraternity, liberty, and equality, and excelled at each assignment he was given, eventually rising to the rank of general. Early 19th century Europe was still governed by the Holy Roman Empire and the Hapsburg and Ottoman dynasties, and the new French Republic had an eye on conquering the entire continent. Dumas lead surges and battles along France’s borders as his nature thirsted to be on the front lines of action. He lead campaigns in the Alps into Italy as France designed to win the peninsula. Yet, Dumas’ exploits on the battlefield were noted by a rising star in the military, one General Napoleon Bonaparte. By 1798, Napoleon already believed that he was destined for greatness and perhaps feared Dumas as a rival for power and glory. The General was quick to put Dumas in his place, resulting in the rise of the Napoleonic age and Dumas nearly becoming a historical footnote.
Dumas was well regarded by the majority of those he encountered in the army. Perhaps Napoleon reinstated race laws in France after a half century of freedoms with his old rival in mind. As a result, Dumas never received accolades in his lifetime. Prior to Reiss unearthing two hundred year old documents what the public knows about Alexandre Dumas comes from memoirs written by his famous son of the same name, the novelist Alexandre Dumas. The younger Dumas bases his protagonist Edouard Dantes on his father, who was imprisoned in an Italian fortress from 1799-1800. Dumas was only four when his father passed away, but between his mother and his father’s colleagues, he was able to piece together a memoir befitting of a decorated general. Reiss cites passages from these memoirs throughout the text, giving Dumas’ accounts of events that were often altered by Napoleon and his cronies. Unfortunately, even after the publication of The Count Of Monte Cristo, few Frenchmen remembered the elder Alexandre Dumas and his battlefield heroics; Edouard Dantes was a memorable hero but few equated him with war hero Alex Dumas.
What I find remarkable is that Alex Dumas achieved glory in the late 18th century at a time when most people of African descent were chained as slaves. That he nearly became the top general in the entire French army speaks to his character and that the French were race blind. And perhaps if Napoleon did not have a complex, history would have turned out different for both Dumas and for France. Having never read the Count Of Monte Cristo and now feel that I must read this classic novel, Tom Reiss does an impeccable job of bringing the real life tale to life for me. I have not read much on European history since high school so I was reminded of an age of revolution as the average person asserted themselves in the face of monarchy and aristocracy. While I am usually drawn to American history and Pulitzer winners of this nature, I was enlightened by the Black Count and respect the research that Reiss undertook in unearthing the Count’s true identity. I look forward to reading his other history of middle eastern politics.
4 stars