Martereau is narrated by a tubercular young man driven by a compulsion
to discover what lies behind faades, especially in relation to the
adults around him. He's particularly interested in Martereau, his
uncle's devoted friend and business associate. All in all, Martereau
seems like a trustworthy, benign, self-sufficient man, but under the
narrator's intense scrutiny--and Martereau's suspect behavior concerning
a shady real-estate deal--his motives seem much more complex and seedy.
In a subtle, skillful way, Nathalie Sarraute explores the difference
between those who are wealthy and those who pretend to be so, and the
manipulative way in which some people get ahead in the world.