For it to be exciting, reading this book survey Vanessa Schneider and Ariane Chemin is not what one might call a "pleasant experience". It is extremely disturbing to imagine that a president could one day take as adviser a man like Patrick Buisson, a historian and journalist by training conviction paranoid to the point of recording all his private conversations. A man nurtured since childhood by the most right-wing ideologies and questionable nostalgic for some of the darkest periods in the past of France. The two journalists from Le Monde offer us the alarming picture of a sickly manipulator, which seems almost unable to feel anything but contempt and hatred for those he dominates. Even Nicolas Sarkozy - who gave him blindly his fate in 2007 - is not spared, since he goes to the address "Naboleon" unable to do anything without him, of "Dwarf" or even "Hollow Head"! Yet it is thanks to this that even Sarkozy will be hired under strange conditions and that TF1 will enjoy enviable emoluments. Convinced of his own superiority, Bush feels no gratitude ... Of course, these are relations "against nature" with Jean-Luc Mélenchon, which will do the most about this book probably in the early days. But do not overlook this amazing moment in 2012 when Bush - great nostalgic for French Algeria - attempted to induce Sarkozy denounced the Evian agreements. Imagine how much that could have disrupted the delicate balance with the powers of the South after the Libyan episode and the Arab Spring ... Thus behind the story of the infiltration of the highest levels of French politics by a ruthless ideologue, also draws a fresco scarier: the image of a sick democracy, a republic and sleepy lost very vulnerable to extremist theses. To read ... but taking a step back to avoid being splashed.