{"version":"1.0","provider_name":"Dimitri Sych - Directeur marketing externalis\u00e9, SEO, GTM, Publicit\u00e9, Croissance, Entrepreneur, Auteur","provider_url":"https:\/\/dimitrisych.com\/fr","author_name":"Dimitri Sych","author_url":"https:\/\/dimitrisych.com\/fr\/author\/vinnitsky777gmail-com\/","title":"Economic Review of November in Paris - Dimitri Sych -Fractional CMO, SEO, GTM, ADS, Growth, Enterpreneur, Author","type":"rich","width":600,"height":338,"html":"<blockquote class=\"wp-embedded-content\" data-secret=\"9XfFLPUOCK\"><a href=\"https:\/\/dimitrisych.com\/fr\/economic-analysis-of-november-in-paris\/\">Revue \u00e9conomique de novembre \u00e0 Paris<\/a><\/blockquote><iframe sandbox=\"allow-scripts\" security=\"restricted\" src=\"https:\/\/dimitrisych.com\/fr\/economic-analysis-of-november-in-paris\/embed\/#?secret=9XfFLPUOCK\" width=\"600\" height=\"338\" title=\"\u00ab\u00a0Economic Review of November in Paris\u00a0\u00bb &#8212; Dimitri Sych -Fractional CMO, SEO, GTM, ADS, Growth, Enterpreneur, Author\" data-secret=\"9XfFLPUOCK\" frameborder=\"0\" marginwidth=\"0\" marginheight=\"0\" scrolling=\"no\" class=\"wp-embedded-content\"><\/iframe><script type=\"text\/javascript\">\n\/* <![CDATA[ *\/\n\/*! This file is auto-generated *\/\n!function(d,l){\"use strict\";l.querySelector&&d.addEventListener&&\"undefined\"!=typeof URL&&(d.wp=d.wp||{},d.wp.receiveEmbedMessage||(d.wp.receiveEmbedMessage=function(e){var t=e.data;if((t||t.secret||t.message||t.value)&&!\/[^a-zA-Z0-9]\/.test(t.secret)){for(var s,r,n,a=l.querySelectorAll('iframe[data-secret=\"'+t.secret+'\"]'),o=l.querySelectorAll('blockquote[data-secret=\"'+t.secret+'\"]'),c=new RegExp(\"^https?:$\",\"i\"),i=0;i<o.length;i++)o[i].style.display=\"none\";for(i=0;i<a.length;i++)s=a[i],e.source===s.contentWindow&&(s.removeAttribute(\"style\"),\"height\"===t.message?(1e3<(r=parseInt(t.value,10))?r=1e3:~~r<200&&(r=200),s.height=r):\"link\"===t.message&&(r=new URL(s.getAttribute(\"src\")),n=new URL(t.value),c.test(n.protocol))&&n.host===r.host&&l.activeElement===s&&(d.top.location.href=t.value))}},d.addEventListener(\"message\",d.wp.receiveEmbedMessage,!1),l.addEventListener(\"DOMContentLoaded\",function(){for(var e,t,s=l.querySelectorAll(\"iframe.wp-embedded-content\"),r=0;r<s.length;r++)(t=(e=s[r]).getAttribute(\"data-secret\"))||(t=Math.random().toString(36).substring(2,12),e.src+=\"#?secret=\"+t,e.setAttribute(\"data-secret\",t)),e.contentWindow.postMessage({message:\"ready\",secret:t},\"*\")},!1)))}(window,document);\n\/\/# sourceURL=https:\/\/dimitrisych.com\/wp-includes\/js\/wp-embed.min.js\n\/* ]]> *\/\n<\/script>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/dimitrisych.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/book-list-betrayal-and-family-secrets-novels.jpg","thumbnail_width":1050,"thumbnail_height":700,"description":"Money as a Language of Survival Most books about money tell stories of success or failure. November in Paris is different. It is an anatomy of how a person\u2019s relationship with money is formed \u2014 not through study or books, but through the body, through fear, through experiences one cannot choose. Lesson One: Money Is Not Money \u2014 It Is Security Max is 11 years old. His mother drinks, his grandfather has died, there is no food. He takes his grandfather\u2019s cart, goes to the wholesale market, collects scrap paper. He sells it. Later, he spots a truck with Christmas trees, counts the vendors, waits for the moment \u2014 and takes one. He sells it to a passerby for twenty. He buys food for the house. The psychologist asks: \u201cWhat did you feel then?\u201d Max replies without pause: \u201cSatisfaction. That I could exchange a situation for a resource. Money in my pocket \u2014 a fact. No guilt.\u201d This is the key economic phrase of the book. He did not steal a tree \u2014 he solved a problem. Money was never an abstraction or a goal. From the beginning, it was the only language through which he could assert: I control the situation. I am not helpless. I am alive. Such an attitude is not chosen. Circumstances imprint it. Lesson Two: Money Is Unstable \u2014 It Cannot Be Trusted Max recalls playing with bills on the floor as a child. At times, it seemed like his parents were suddenly millionaires. But the inflation of the post-Soviet 1990s did its work: yesterday, a thousand rubles \u2014 a loaf of bread; tomorrow, millions are needed. Money vanished faster than it appeared. This forms a specific economic instinct \u2014 distrust of accumulation. Why save what may lose value overnight? Better to convert it into action, resource, movement. This is not irresponsibility \u2014 it is a rational response to historical experience. His generation watched their parents\u2019 savings evaporate. The body remembers. Lesson Three: The System Distributes Money Unequally Summer with Alexander. Max and the owner\u2019s son work together. At the end of the season, the son receives 21,000; Max receives 3,000. Plus, the son\u2019s old laptop, which Max \u201cbuys\u201d with his own salary. He recounts this calmly. \u201cWho receives resources, who survives on the margin, who learns to be self-reliant despite the system.\u201d Here, he internalizes a major economic law of his life: rules differ for different people. Not because you work poorly \u2014 but because you are not one of them. Money becomes a marker of belonging, not merit. French slogans about equality are later read with the cold irony of someone who has seen real internal distribution. Lesson Four: Money Reveals People When Max first acquires significant money \u2014 from selling an apartment \u2014 many \u201cfriends\u201d appear: clubs, women, parties. He observes this but continues. Buys a car, a small apartment, tries flipping real estate. Loses more than he earns. When the money ends, the same people say bluntly: \u201cPay or leave.\u201d One friend, to whom Max lent money, paid for his wife\u2019s surgery, provided work \u2014 when Max asks to reclaim a car to buy at least a room, responds: \u201cGo to hell.\u201d Legally, everything was on paper in Max\u2019s favor. But trust had failed. Not just betrayal \u2014 an economic experiment with clear outcomes: money acts as an X-ray. It shows who is there by choice, who is there by calculation. Max internalizes this not as cynicism but as a tool for discernment. Lesson Five: Money Is Not the Goal \u2014 It Is Proof By the book\u2019s timeline, Max lives in Paris, works, and supports his daughter. Financially stable. Yet nowhere does he rejoice in money for its own sake. No pleasure in purchases, no pride in income. Money is functional to the extreme: It signals one thing: I am no longer the boy on the cold curb with nowhere to go. I control the situation. I am not helpless. Place Vend\u00f4me in the finale is no random location: the most expensive square in Paris, Ritz, Cartier, black cars at the entrance. Max stands here thinking not about money, but about the boy who once stole a tree to feed his family. The circle closes. Not because he is wealthy, but because he is no longer surviving. Implications for the Reader November in Paris is rare in depicting economic thinking not as a trait but as a biography. Max is not greedy or materialistic. Money, from childhood, functioned as family: providing a sense of security. This explains much: And why the final peace is real. Not because he earned enough, but because, for the first time, money ceased to be a language of fear. November in Paris \u2014 a novel by Dmitry Sych. Available on Amazon in Russian, English, and French."}