Honoré de Balzac worked himself to death at fifty-one, producing ninety-plus novels documenting nineteenth-century French society. He earned enormous sums yet died deeply in debt. He observed human psychology with unprecedented accuracy yet was blind to his own delusions.
Stefan Zweig's Balzac, completed shortly before his 1942 suicide, examines this paradox: genius and disaster from the same obsessive energy. Balzac wrote at night, fueled by fifty cups of coffee daily, working twelve to sixteen hour stretches. Each novel paid debts; the income immediately went to creditors, requiring more writing. The cycle was fatal.
The biography follows interconnected themes: catastrophic business schemes, work habits that made him legendary and killed him, seventeen-year obsession with Polish countess Eveline Hanska (they married months before his death), and unprecedented ambition—La Comédie Humaine as systematic documentation of society through interconnected novels.
Zweig's method is literary and psychological rather than scholarly, synthesizing Balzac's correspondence into dramatic narrative. The portrait captures essential truths: novels emerged from the same energy producing financial chaos; the paradoxes—realist living in fantasy, money expert who was financially catastrophic—genuinely characterized his life.
Written in Zweig's final years, the biography reflects on artistic achievement's costs. Balzac died believing himself a failure—in debt, health ruined. Posterity recognized him as literature's giant. Zweig, despairing about Europe's destruction, surely contemplated this gap between contemporary failure and eventual recognition.
Compelling introduction to why Balzac matters and meditation on creativity's demands—the demon granting genius while destroying its host. Zweig's final major work: exploration of obsession from a master who understood its costs.











