What Are The Best Revenge Books Similar To Count Of Monte Cristo?

2025-08-05 00:17:08 416

2 Answers

Bella
Bella
2025-08-08 09:41:57
If you loved 'The Count of Monte Cristo,' dive into 'The Lies of Locke Lamora' by Scott Lynch. It's a heist novel with revenge simmering underneath—think Dantès but with thieves' cunning instead of aristocratic maneuvering. The protagonist's wit and the elaborate cons make every payoff satisfying. For historical fiction, 'The Nightingale' by Kristin Hannah explores revenge through wartime resistance, where vengeance is quieter but no less powerful. And 'Red Rising' by Pierce Brown? Pure, unfiltered revenge opera dressed as sci-fi. The protagonist's rise from oppression to rebellion is Monte Cristo-level cathartic, just with more space battles.
Valerie
Valerie
2025-08-10 02:11:01
but I've found some gems that come close. 'The Stars My Destination' by Alfred Bester is like Monte Cristo in space, with a protagonist so consumed by vengeance he literally learns to teleport out of sheer rage. It's wild, pulpy, and has that same meticulous plotting where every betrayal gets repaid tenfold. Then there's 'Best Served Cold' by Joe Abercrombie, which takes revenge into grimdark fantasy territory. The main character, Monza, is like Edmond Dantès if he had zero patience and a lot more knives. The action is brutal, the twists are vicious, and the moral ambiguity makes you question who you're even rooting for.

For something more grounded, 'The Revenant' by Michael Punke is survivalist revenge at its rawest. It's less about elaborate schemes and more about one man's primal drive to survive and retaliate. The prose is sparse but visceral, like being dragged through the mud alongside the protagonist. And if you want psychological depth, 'The Secret History' by Donna Tartt isn't a traditional revenge tale, but the way guilt and retribution weave through the characters' lives has that same slow burn. It's Monte Cristo's elegance meets 'Crime and Punishment's' introspection.
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