Le Crime


Book Description

A cross between The Spy Who Came in from the Cold and A Year in Provence, this ingenious thriller gets stunning raves from one and all: "A marvel." - Olen Steinhauer • "Riveting." - France Today • "Elements of Agatha Christie and Robert Ludlum." - Bookreporter.com • "'Superbe'." - Jim Fusilli • "Like a good Alan Furst or Graham Greene." - The Washingtonian • "Engaging." - Publishers Weekly Le Crime is a story of political intrigue, corruption and jealousy. It is also a story of love and friendship and, of course, France. When political intrigue drove Louis Morgon from a successful career at the State Department, he moved to a cottage in France, far from Washington and what he called "the sordid world." He took up painting. He grew vegetables and flowers. He ate long, lovely meals on the terrace overlooking fields of sunflowers. He thought that he had found happiness. Then one day Louis's past lands squarely on his doorstep. It does so in the shape of a dead man. His throat has been slit. He wears a cap with liberte embroidered on it. Except for the local cop, Jean Renard, the police are strangely uninterested. This seems peculiar to Renard, but not to Louis. He knows who the murderer is. He also knows that he is likely to be the next victim. And there is very little he or Renard or anyone else can do. Each clue they find raises more questions than it answers. Nothing is as it appears. Louis's best hope is to turn the tables on his murderer. Instead of knowledge, he has only his intuition and his intelligence. Instead of power or influence, he has only his own past. Louis finds himself on a lonely and dangerous journey of self-discovery. He thought he was beyond surprises. But every turn of the road reveals new mysteries, and the resolution is a shock. This book was previously published as A French Country Murder.




Napoleon's Crimes


Book Description

Did Napoleon provide the model for Hitler's Final Solution?140 years before the Holocaust, Napoleon used gas to exterminate the civil population of the Antilles, he created concentration camps in Corsica and Alba, and he re-established the slave trade, provoking the deaths of over 200,000 Africans in the French colonies. In this riveting and controversial expose, Ribbe reveals Napoleon's shocking legacy to the atrocities of the twentieth century.




Le crime de la piste


Book Description

Au coeur de la forêt guyanaise, un ouvrier est abattu. Parce que l'accident a eu lieu sur son ancien terrain d'étude, Yves Noël doit revenir pour participer à l'enquête. Mais il n'est plus le bienvenu. Ni de ses deux anciens collègues, qui campaient, seuls, avec la victime. Ni des secrétaires du centre. Ni même de cette fascinante jeune femme qu'il avait à peine osé aborder deux ans plus tôt, et qui prétend ne plus le reconnaître.Mais plus l'enquête avance, plus cette piste qu'il imaginait déserte se trouve au carrefour de mystérieux rendez-vous. Et, malheureusement pour lui, la jeune femme y est de moins en moins étrangère.Yves désire-t-il vraiment savoir la vérité ?




Le crime du coffre


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Mrs Jay Coothtoo, postière de Gloucesterdale, est retrouvée égorgée, enfermée dans un coffre fort dont elle tient la clé, serrée entre ses doigts rapaces. Le détective Alfred Stophen, secondé par le commissaire Jeroboam, mène une enquête haletante. Face à la puissance conjuguée de leurs deux cerveaux surdimensionnés, il faut la démesure d'un génie du mal pour échapper à leur sagacité.Face au souriant dentiste Sir Oscar, au sinistre épicier des hauts plateaux, Gérard Ayfiémévisit, au prudent pharmacien Lunamoi ou au mystérieux docteur Joulesound, Alfred doit penser profondément. Si profondément que sa pensée en perdra le souffle et finira par se noyer dans les abîmes sous-marins de son inconscient. Reprenant l'affaire depuis le début, il lui faudra classer dans son esprit les faits dans leur ordre d'apparition."Buvant une gorgée d'alcool, il chercha le nom de la première victime. Il ne s'en souvenait plus. Dans des brumes incertaines, il se demanda si l'affaire concernait sa mère, ou le vieux Joulesound".




The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard


Book Description

I had put on my slippers and my dressing-gown. I wiped away a tear with which the north wind blowing over the quay had obscured my vision. A bright fire was leaping in the chimney of my study. Ice-crystals, shaped like fern-leaves, were sprouting over the windowpanes and concealed from me the Seine with its bridges and the Louvre of the Valois. I drew up my easy-chair to the hearth, and my table-volante, and took up so much of my place by the fire as Hamilcar deigned to allow me. Hamilcar was lying in front of the andirons, curled up on a cushion, with his nose between his paws. His think find fur rose and fell with his regular breathing. At my coming, he slowly slipped a glance of his agate eyes at me from between his half-opened lids, which he closed again almost at once, thinking to himself, "It is nothing; it is only my friend." "Hamilcar," I said to him, as I stretched my legsÑ"Hamilcar, somnolent Prince of the City of BooksÑthou guardian nocturnal! Like that Divine Cat who combated the impious in HeliopolisÑin the night of the great combatÑthou dost defend from vile nibblers those books which the old savant acquired at the cost of his slender savings and indefatigable zeal. Sleep, Hamilcar, softly as a sultana, in this library, that shelters thy military virtues; for verily in thy person are united the formidable aspect of a Tatar warrior and the slumbrous grace of a woman of the Orient. Sleep, thou heroic and voluptuous Hamilcar, while awaiting the moonlight hour in which the mice will come forth to dance before the Acta Sanctorum of the learned Bolandists!" The beginning of this discourse pleased Hamilcar, who accompanied it with a throat-sound like the song of a kettle on the fire. But as my voice waxed louder, Hamilcar notified me by lowering his ears and by wrinkling the striped skin of his brow that it was bad taste on my part so to declaim. "This old-book man," evidently thought Hamilcar, "talks to no purpose at all while our housekeeper never utters a word which is not full of good sense, full of significanceÑcontaining either the announcement of a meal or the promise of a whipping. One knows what she says. But this old man puts together a lot of sounds signifying nothing." So thought Hamilcar to himself. Leaving him to his reflections, I opened a book, which I began to read with interest; for it was a catalogue of manuscripts. I do not know any reading more easy, more fascinating, more delightful than that of a catalogue. The one which I was readingÑedited in 1824 by Mr. Thompson, librarian to Sir Thomas RaleighÑsins, it is true, by excess of brevity, and does not offer that character of exactitude which the archivists of my own generation were the first to introduce into works upon diplomatics and paleography. It leaves a good deal to be desired and to be divined. This is perhaps why I find myself aware, while reading it, of a state of mind which in nature more imaginative than mine might be called reverie. I had allowed myself to drift away this gently upon the current of my thoughts, when my housekeeper announced, in a tone of ill-humor, that Monsieur Coccoz desired to speak with me.




Le Crime


Book Description

A cross between The Spy Who Came in from the Cold and A Year in Provence, this ingenious thriller gets stunning raves from one and all: "Unforgettable . . . combines elements of Agatha Christie and Robert Ludlum." ---Bookreporter.com "A riveting murder mystery." ---France Today "Steiner sketches such a rich life for his tiny town that he makes you want to get on the next plane." ---Chicago Tribune "A beautiful crime novel." ---Thomas Perry, New York Times bestselling author of Nightlife "A page-turner---like a good Alan Furst or Graham Greene novel." ---The Washingtonian "Louis Morgon is a marvel." ---Olen Steinhauer, author of Victory Square "Le Crime est superbe." ---Jim Fusilli, author of Hard, Hard City Former State Department expert Louis Morgon finds a murdered body on the doorstep of his charming little house in France, and he and the local gendarme team up to solve the murder. Thriller and mystery lovers: Bon appetit





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The Canada Gazette


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Sodomy in Eighteenth-Century France


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We know more about men who sought and had sex with men in eighteenth-century Paris than in any other city at the time. Police records provide information about thousands of sodomites who were arrested and thousands more who were not. Michel Rey explored the sodomitical culture of the capital in five articles, based on one set of sources, published from 1982 to 1994. No one has completed his pioneering work in the archives and challenged his anachronistic conclusions about identity, community, and effeminacy. This book, the first on the subject based on extensive research in all of the relevant series of police records, explores patterns and changes in the lives of men who desired men and in the surveillance and punishment of same-sex relations across the century. Chapters 1 and 2 offer a more systematic, skeptical, and subtle analysis of complex questions about mentalities than Rey did. Chapters 3 and 4 discuss the ways in which sodomites made connections through solicitation in public spaces and networking in private places and the ways in which the police tracked them. Chapters 5 and 6 analyze the operations of agents who entrapped sodomites and the procedures of magistrates who judged them. The book examines what the extant sources do and do not tell us about the heads, hearts, and hands of men detained or mentioned by the police. To that end, it includes a generous selection of documents that allow us to hear voices from the archives, including many that require us to rethink what we thought we knew about the subculture.




Canada Gazette


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