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The Mesmerist's Victim explores the perilous borderland between science and sorcery, staging mesmerism as both fashionable experiment and instrument of moral coercion. In compact, theatrically charged prose, Dumas turns trance, suggestion, and concealed desire into engines of suspense. The tale belongs to the nineteenth-century moment when animal magnetism fascinated salons and physicians, and it translates that cultural anxiety into a Romantic narrative of heightened emotion, swift reversals, and Gothic unease. Alexandre Dumas (1802-1870), celebrated for The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo, was also a master of shorter sensational forms. His background in theatre sharpened his instinct for confrontation, revelation, and climactic timing, while his omnivorous curiosity led him to debates about medicine, criminality, and the occult. The subject of mesmerism suited a writer drawn to charismatic power and the fragile boundary between freedom and manipulation. This book is recommended for readers who want Dumas beyond the cloak-and-sword adventure: intimate, eerie, and psychologically suggestive. It will appeal to students of French Romanticism, admirers of Gothic fiction, and anyone interested in how early popular literature imagined the mind under influence. Brief yet resonant, it reveals Dumas's gift for making a fashionable idea feel like a timeless human danger.