Wormwood (1890) is a novel by Marie Corelli. Published at the beginning of Corelli-s career as one of the most successful writers of her generation, Wormwood combines realism, social commentary, and family drama to tell a story of murder, revenge, and addiction set in the bustling city of Paris. Due for reassessment by a modern audience, Marie Corelli-s work-which has inspired several adaptations for film and theater-is a must read for fans of nineteenth century fiction. -Men such as -Gaston Beauvais- are to be met with every day in Paris-and not only in Paris, but in every part of the Continent where the Curse, which forms the subject of this story, has any sort of sway. The morbidness of the modern French mind is well known [-]; the open atheism, heartlessness, flippancy, and flagrant immorality of the whole modern French school of thought is unquestioned.- Intended as a rallying cry to English readers, Wormwood states quite clearly Corelli-s beliefs on progressivism