Monday, February 9, 2026

Fairy Tale Spotlight: I, Libertine [Book Review]

"I, Libertine" as written by Frederick R. Ewing is a hoax novel that did not actually exist when it was first being promoted. It was mainly Jean Shepherd that promoted it on his radio show. It had to do with the often arbitrary rules by which books ended up on best seller lists in the 50's. In fact, it still kind of works that way today.

Jean Shepherd and other celebrities all pushed people to read this amazing book, and soon everyone was struggling to have their copies ordered at bookstores. It didn't exist though, and nobody could figure out what was going on. The strange thing is that it did end up on a best seller list even though nobody actually wrote the damn thing.

However once this corruption was exposed, the book did ultimately get written. It appeared on book shelves as "I, Libertine" by Frederick R. Ewing, but the author was actually famed scifi writer Theodore Sturgeon. It was published in 1956. On the back cover was a picture of the author, but it was actually just Jean Shepherd all dressed up to look fancy.

But what about the book? Now that the book exists, is it any good? Well... yes... but it is something of a difficult read if you are not super into historical fiction. It takes place in 18th century England, and centers around a man named Lance Courteney who takes up a legal manner revolving around a very devious woman named Elizabeth Chudleigh.

She was a real person and involved with a good number of scandals, usually involving bigamy. But the point was that she was extremely powerful, vindictive, and dangerous to mess around with. As horrible as she might have been, the story focuses more around Lance who spends the whole book trying to determine what sort of man he wants to be.

The concept of "libertine" is thrown around a lot in this story. It's something Lance wants to be. It has to do with being personally independent and bound only by your own counsel and choices. The book does a surprisingly good job at showing the folly of this, and I loved how it deals with it by the book's end. Solid work. It rather trumps all the legal mumbo jumbo that I had to put up with throughout.

A lot of people just think that libertine means hedonism. That's complete rubbish. Hedonism strictly means that you live for pleasure. Libertine can lead to that, but it doesn't have to. A person can be libertine and be good-hearted, compassionate, and sincere, because they chose to be that way. But they are not doing it because they hold allegiance to God. They do it because they believe it is entirely in their nature to do it and nothing else. This also is folly because God demands allegiance regardless of your worldly beliefs and actions. Unfortunately, the libertine mentality shall always be adverse to God. It is not humble in the slightest, and God loves the humble. Ultimately that person would be damned and likely even suspect it if he was well-versed in religion.

This is a difficult book to recommend because it spends a lot of time on Lance's legal issues, but it is extremely well crafted. If you are looking for some well-written historical fiction, then I could recommend this one. It's still funny how the book made it to the best seller lists before it even existed. Jean Shepherd played a really good joke, but at least it ended up existing eventually.

This blog was written on December 27, 2025.

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1 comment:

  1. Interesting that a book that did not exist became a best seller. Interesting all the more that the hoax became real. On a similar note, H.P. Lovecraft mentions the Necronomicon in his stories. He openly said there was no such book, that it was entirely within his fiction... yet people looked for it. People wrote supposed copies. ALSO: the openly fictional books of the fictional author Sutter Cane in the movie IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS have been written, but as fan fiction rather than as hoaxes.

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