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The Scapegoat (Du Maurier novel)

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takes the gun, believing he was planning suicide. When the priest leaves, Jean arrives and mocks John's attempts to help the family, mistakenly thinking he only wants to stay with them for the money and comfort, but John reveals he has grown to love them. Jean then announces that he has sold John's London flat, resigned from his university job, and cleared out his bank account, so John's old self is effectively gone forever. As the two men exchange clothes, John tries to tell Jean that his family has changed but Jean ignores him and heads for the château.
234:, he meets a French count, Jean de Gué, who looks and sounds exactly like him. As the two drink together, John confesses that he is depressed, feeling as though his outward life is a meaningless façade, and the pair move on to a hotel where John passes out. Next day he wakes to find his clothes and possessions gone, with Jean's chauffeur urging him to get dressed (in Jean's clothes which are left for him) and come home to the ancestral château. 273: 249:. Marie-Noel goes missing and everyone but Françoise searches for her. When she's found in the well at the glassworks, John discovers that Jean murdered Duval and threw his body in the well, accusing him of being a Nazi collaborator. Marie-Noel climbed down the well as an act of penitence on behalf of her father. John also learns that Blanche had a relationship with Duval. 27: 253:
against Françoise) was the last straw. John persuades the mother to resume her position at the head of the family and give up the morphine. He also suggests that Paul take a break from the glass business and mend his marriage with Renée. Finally, John apologizes to Blanche for Jean's past actions and asks her to run the glassworks in his place.
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The family's glassworks is losing money and faces closure, so John renegotiates a contract to keep it afloat for six months. The next day he learns Françoise's dowry is in trust for a male heir, but if she dies or reaches the age of 50 without having had a son, Jean will inherit the money instead. In
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The next day, John gets a telephone call from the real Jean de Gué, who says he will be back in the evening and will meet him at the glassworks. Determined not to lose his new life to a murderous villain, John waits for Jean with a revolver. However, the priest for Françoise's funeral finds him and
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There he meets his doppelgänger's family: Jean's feeble, pregnant wife Françoise and over-imaginative young daughter Marie-Noel; his dull brother Paul and embittered sister Blanche; Paul's frustrated wife (and Jean's mistress) Renée; and Jean's elderly, morphine-addicted mother. As he learns about
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After falling from her bedroom window, Françoise and her unborn baby—a boy—both die. Suspecting suicide, John learns from Jean's mother that Françoise knew of Jean's affairs and feared that the family all wanted her out of the way; Marie-Noel's disappearance (an apparent sign that she had turned
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John goes to see Béla, who has intuited that he is not Jean. She reassures him the de Gué family will be different now, even if Jean tries to undo what John did. Lamenting his feelings of failure, John decides to seek consolation at a monastery.
199:. In a bar in France, a lonely English academic on holiday meets his double, a French aristocrat who gets him drunk, swaps identities and disappears, leaving the Englishman to sort out the Frenchman's extensive financial and family problems. 87: 246: 48: 574: 417: 718: 242:
the nearest town, John meets BĂ©la, another of Jean's mistresses, who becomes suspicious of his sudden concern for the family and its business.
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the decades of resentments and failures that haunt the family, John feels he should do something to help put things right.
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John learns that Maurice Duval, former head of the glassworks, was killed during the
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John, an English lecturer in French history, is on holiday in France. In
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Sir Frederick Browning 16:1957 novel by Daphne du Maurier 36:consists almost entirely of a 1: 390:Du Maurier – Scapegoat Review 340:Sehgal, Parul (6 July 2017). 709:Novels by Daphne du Maurier 559:The Birds and Other Stories 745: 729:Victor Gollancz Ltd books 84: 646:Muriel, Lady du Maurier 530:The House on the Strand 664:Cannon Hall, Hampstead 640:Sir Gerald du Maurier 724:Novels set in France 714:British crime novels 704:1957 British novels 308:"Mistaken Identity" 195:is a 1957 novel by 81: 45:improve the article 575:The Breaking Point 482:The King's General 346:The New York Times 312:The New York Times 49:real-world context 691: 690: 658:George du Maurier 652:Angela du Maurier 610:The Years Between 466:Frenchman's Creek 442:The Loving Spirit 427:Daphne du Maurier 247:German occupation 197:Daphne du Maurier 188: 187: 151:Publication place 101:Daphne du Maurier 77: 76: 69: 736: 678:(fictional home) 666:(childhood home) 498:My Cousin Rachel 420: 413: 406: 397: 365: 364: 362: 360: 337: 331: 330: 328: 326: 303: 281: 276: 275: 178: 162:Print (hardback) 142:Publication date 91:First US edition 89: 82: 72: 65: 61: 58: 52: 29: 28: 21: 744: 743: 739: 738: 737: 735: 734: 733: 694: 693: 692: 687: 622: 589: 551:and collections 550: 544: 429: 424: 392:by Laura Varnam 374: 369: 368: 358: 356: 339: 338: 334: 324: 322: 305: 304: 300: 295: 277: 270: 267: 228: 159:Media type 143: 132: 129:Victor Gollancz 119:Mystery fiction 92: 73: 62: 56: 53: 47:by adding more 42: 30: 26: 17: 12: 11: 5: 742: 740: 732: 731: 726: 721: 716: 711: 706: 696: 695: 689: 688: 686: 685: 679: 673: 667: 661: 655: 649: 643: 637: 630: 628: 624: 623: 621: 620: 617:September Tide 614: 606: 597: 595: 591: 590: 588: 587: 579: 571: 563:The Apple Tree 554: 552: 546: 545: 543: 542: 538:Rule Britannia 534: 526: 518: 510: 502: 494: 486: 478: 470: 462: 454: 446: 437: 435: 431: 430: 425: 423: 422: 415: 408: 400: 394: 393: 387: 373: 372:External links 370: 367: 366: 332: 297: 296: 294: 291: 290: 289: 283: 282: 266: 263: 227: 224: 186: 185: 180: 172: 171: 168: 164: 163: 160: 156: 155: 154:United Kingdom 152: 148: 147: 144: 141: 138: 137: 126: 122: 121: 116: 112: 111: 108: 104: 103: 98: 94: 93: 90: 80:The Scapegoat 75: 74: 33: 31: 24: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 741: 730: 727: 725: 722: 720: 717: 715: 712: 710: 707: 705: 702: 701: 699: 683: 680: 677: 674: 671: 668: 665: 662: 660:(grandfather) 659: 656: 653: 650: 647: 644: 641: 638: 635: 632: 631: 629: 625: 618: 615: 612: 611: 607: 604: 603: 599: 598: 596: 592: 585: 584: 580: 577: 576: 572: 569: 565: 564: 560: 556: 555: 553: 549:Short stories 547: 540: 539: 535: 532: 531: 527: 524: 523: 519: 516: 515: 514:The Scapegoat 511: 508: 507: 503: 500: 499: 495: 492: 491: 490:The Parasites 487: 484: 483: 479: 476: 475: 471: 468: 467: 463: 460: 459: 455: 452: 451: 447: 444: 443: 439: 438: 436: 432: 428: 421: 416: 414: 409: 407: 402: 401: 398: 391: 388: 386: 382: 381: 380:The Scapegoat 376: 375: 371: 355: 351: 347: 343: 336: 333: 321: 317: 313: 309: 302: 299: 292: 288: 285: 284: 280: 279:Novels portal 274: 269: 264: 262: 258: 254: 250: 248: 243: 239: 235: 233: 225: 223: 221: 217: 213: 209: 208:Alec Guinness 205: 200: 198: 194: 193: 192:The Scapegoat 184: 181: 179: 173: 169: 165: 161: 157: 153: 149: 145: 139: 135: 130: 127: 123: 120: 117: 113: 109: 105: 102: 99: 95: 88: 83: 71: 68: 60: 57:November 2011 50: 46: 40: 39: 34:This article 32: 23: 22: 19: 682:Mrs. Danvers 616: 608: 600: 581: 573: 562: 558: 536: 528: 520: 513: 512: 504: 496: 488: 480: 472: 464: 456: 448: 440: 379: 357:. 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Index

plot summary
improve the article
real-world context
Learn how and when to remove this message

Daphne du Maurier
Mystery fiction
Victor Gollancz
Doubleday
OCLC
4542871
Daphne du Maurier
1959
Alec Guinness
Bette Davis
2012
Matthew Rhys
Le Mans
German occupation
icon
Novels portal
Doppelgänger
"Mistaken Identity"
ISSN
0362-4331
"In Praise of Daphne du Maurier"
ISSN
0362-4331
Review of The Scapegoat
Jo Walton

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