The Confidence-Man, satirical allegory by Herman Melville, published in 1857. This novel was the last to be published during Melville’s lifetime, and it reveals the author’s pessimistic view of an America grown tawdry through greed, self-delusion, and lack of charity.
Set on a steamboat traveling on the Mississippi River, the work is an episodic series of vignettes of various passengers—some dupes, some tricksters—who represent a gullible American public that can be deceived by charlatans and by the lure of easy money.