69 A Place of Greater Safety - Hilary Mantel (Audible)
This was one of Hilary Mantel's earlier works about the French Revolution, incredibly long and dialogue heavy, and the complicated politics of the time. I'm prone to waking around 4 am in the morning so in go the Airpods and I've been listening along for a few hours and cracked through it fairly quickly, although I may have drifted off in parts. I'm not sure how she dreamed up the title, it was a horrible time and there didn't seem to be any place of greater safety, unless those affected saw the writing on the wall and were one of the many boats landing on the south coast of England, France wasn't a place to hang around in then, it wasn't called the Great Terror for nothing.
The main protagonists in this are Georges Danton, Maximilien Robespierre, Camille Desmoulins, who was male, the Camille pronounced Cam me. All part of the revolutionary movement, eventually going to the guillotine like everyone else. An example of "be careful what you wish for!" It was almost a blessing that Napoleon mounted a bloodless coup d'etat to bring this vicious era to an end in overthrowing the rule of the Directory, even if at a later stage he was to crown himself Emperor of France. His authoritarianism replaced the revolutionary battle cry of "Liberte, egalitie and fraternite" as France passed into the hands of an autocrat with far more power than Louis XV1 ever had, and imo that's what happens in revolutions, one strata of power is merely replaced with another, and sometimes what the people get is worse. However, I'm glad I listened to this rather than read it, that would have been quite an undertaking, Not knowing too much about those times, I've been busy Googling. Nevertheless, what a brilliant mind Hilary Mantel has, or rather had.