What it argues
Les Liaisons Dangereuses is an epistolary novel set in pre-Revolutionary French aristocratic society, built entirely from letters between its characters. At its center are two former lovers-turned-collaborators: the Vicomte de Valmont, a brilliantly skilled seducer, and the Marquise de Merteuil, an equally brilliant social strategist. Together they plot the corruption of an innocent young woman, the humiliation of a virtuous wife, and various other intrigues — until their alliance turns against itself.
The novel is fundamentally a study in power exercised through language and social performance. Merteuil and Valmont are not passionate creatures; they are calculators, and their letters detail their schemes with the precision of a military campaign. What makes the book unsettling is how lucid they are about what they're doing and how little they feel obligated to pretend otherwise — at least to each other. Meanwhile the letters from their victims pulse with genuine feeling, and the contrast between the novel's cold architects and its warm casualties is where most of the moral weight lives. Merteuil's account of her own education, in which she taught herself to disguise her inner life perfectly as an act of self-preservation in a society that punished women for having inner lives, is one of the more devastating passages in eighteenth-century literature.
What it gets right
- 1.
Merteuil and Valmont treat seduction as a competitive art and their targets as problems to be solved — but their collaboration is itself a form of mutual seduction that eventually collapses under its own logic.
- 2.
Merteuil's backstory is a compressed indictment of eighteenth-century gender relations: she invented herself as a performance precisely because authentic women were destroyed for existing in public.
- 3.
The epistolary structure is the novel's central formal achievement — every letter is also a performance, and the reader's job is to read what characters reveal to each other against what they're trying to conceal.
What it covers
Who wrote it
Pierre Choderlos de Laclos (1741–1803) was a French military officer who wrote one novel, published it at forty, and spent the rest of his life in the army and in Revolutionary politics. Les Liaisons Dangereuses was his only major literary work and became both a scandal and a sensation. He served under Napoleon and died on military campaign in Taranto. Despite the single-novel output, his reputation as a novelist has never faded; the book has been continuously in print since its publication and has been adapted for stage, film, and opera multiple times.