Zofloya, ou le Maure, Histoire du XVe siècle by Charlotte Dacre

(6 User reviews)   1468
By Quinn Zhou Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Cultural Narratives
Dacre, Charlotte, 1782?-1825 Dacre, Charlotte, 1782?-1825
French
Okay, picture this: it's 15th-century Venice, and Victoria di Loredani is having a very bad day. Actually, a very bad life. After her father's death and her mother's scandalous remarriage, her world falls apart. She's full of rage, ambition, and a desperate need for power. Enter Zofloya, a mysterious and strikingly handsome Moorish servant who seems to have all the answers. He offers her a path to everything she desires—revenge, love, control—but the price might be her soul. This isn't a gentle Gothic romance; it's a wild, shocking ride into the darkest corners of obsession and corruption. If you ever wondered what would happen if a classic villainess got her own story, with zero apologies, this is your book. It's like watching a train wreck in slow motion, and you can't look away.
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Let's talk about Zofloya, a book that feels like it was written to cause a scandal. Published in 1806 under a pen name, it was Charlotte Dacre's way of pushing every button the Gothic genre had.

The Story

We follow Victoria di Loredani from her spoiled youth in Venice. After her father dies, her mother runs off with a sinister lover, leaving Victoria and her brother adrift. Betrayed and furious, Victoria's heart hardens into a pit of ambition and spite. Her one goal becomes possessing Henriquez, the man engaged to her pure-hearted rival, Lilla. When the enigmatic servant Zofloya enters her service, he becomes her confidant and strategist, guiding her through plots of seduction, betrayal, and eventually murder. But as Victoria's crimes pile up, it becomes clear that Zofloya is far more than a helpful footman. His assistance comes with a terrifying, ultimate cost.

Why You Should Read It

This book is fascinating because it lets its female protagonist be truly, spectacularly wicked. Victoria isn't a victim led astray; she's angry, selfish, and makes awful choices because she wants to. Dacre doesn't ask us to forgive her, just to understand the storm inside her. Zofloya himself is a magnetic and unsettling figure. The book grapples with huge, messy themes—racism, sexual desire, the nature of evil—with a boldness that still feels fresh. It asks: if society boxes you in, do you break the rules, or do you break yourself trying to fit? Victoria chooses to break everything.

Final Verdict

This is for readers who find classic heroines a bit too well-behaved. If you love the dark, psychological tension of Wuthering Heights but wish it had more outright villainy and supernatural dread, you'll devour this. It's perfect for fans of anti-heroes, Gothic atmosphere, and stories that aren't afraid to let their characters burn the world down. Just don't expect a happy ending—expect to be thoroughly gripped and a little haunted.

Sandra Williams
1 year ago

Fast paced, good book.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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