The reluctant matador: a Hugo Marston novel

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English

Description

A nineteen-year-old aspiring model has disappeared in Paris. Her father, Bart Denum, turns to his old friend Hugo Marston for help. Marston, the security chief at the American Embassy, makes some inquiries and quickly realizes something is amiss: Bart’s daughter was not a model, but rather a dancer at a seedy strip club. And she headed to Barcelona with some guy she met at the club. With his friend and former CIA agent, Tom Green, Marston heads for Barcelona. The two sleuths identify the man last seen with the girl, break into his house, and encounter a shocking scene: Bart Denum, standing over the dead and battered body of their mysterious stranger. Though Bart protests his innocence, under the damning circumstances, Spanish authorities arrest him for murder. The two American investigators are faced with their biggest challenge ever: find the real killer, prove Bart’s innocence, and locate his missing daughter—without getting killed along the way.

More Details

Contributors
McLaren, Todd Narrator
Pryor, Mark Author
ISBN
9781633880023
9781705289136
9781633880030

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Also in this Series

  • The bookseller: the first Hugo Marston novel (Hugo Marston novels Volume 1) Cover
  • The crypt thief: a Hugo Marston novel (Hugo Marston novels Volume 2) Cover
  • The blood promise: a Hugo Marston novel (Hugo Marston novels Volume 3) Cover
  • The Button man: a Hugo Marston novel (Hugo Marston novels Volume 4) Cover
  • The reluctant matador: a Hugo Marston novel (Hugo Marston novels Volume 5) Cover
  • The Paris librarian (Hugo Marston novels Volume 6) Cover
  • The Sorbonne affair: a Hugo Marston novel (Hugo Marston novels Volume 7) Cover
  • The book artist: a Hugo Marston novel (Hugo Marston novels Volume 8) Cover
  • The French widow (Hugo Marston novels Volume 9) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
The Hugo Marston Novels and Aimee Leduc Investigations mysteries feature security detectives in Paris, France who use brains and action to solve crimes. All the characters are fully developed, along with intricate plotting and appealing descriptions of Paris. -- Merle Jacob
Readers looking for intricately plotted and thrilling stories that feature prized art, crimes, and murder will enjoy the literary fiction series Forgers and mystery series Hugo Marston. Both also feature engaging characters who wade through mysterious and dangerous scenarios. -- Andrienne Cruz
In the Hugo Marston Novels and Chief Inspector Adamsberg Investigations, the appealing lead detectives are strong men who use brains and action to solve crimes. The stories are intricately plotted and filled with evocative descriptions of French life and culture. -- Merle Jacob
These series have the appeal factors strong sense of place, atmospheric, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "mysteries"; and the subjects "american people in france" and "murder."
These series have the appeal factors suspenseful, strong sense of place, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "mysteries"; and the subjects "murder investigation," "murder," and "missing persons."
These series have the appeal factors richly detailed, strong sense of place, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "mysteries"; the subjects "murder investigation," "argyll, jonathan (fictitious character)," and "di stefano, flavia (fictitious character)"; and characters that are "likeable characters" and "well-developed characters."
These series have the appeal factors suspenseful, richly detailed, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "mysteries"; and the subjects "murder" and "conspiracies."
These series have the appeal factors suspenseful, richly detailed, and intricately plotted, and they have the subjects "murder investigation" and "murder."
These series have the appeal factors strong sense of place, atmospheric, and intricately plotted, and they have the subjects "american people in france" and "murder investigation"; and characters that are "likeable characters."

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NoveList recommends "Forgers" for fans of "Hugo Marston novels". Check out the first book in the series.
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Mark Pryor and Cara Black write atmospheric detective mysteries set in Paris, France. Their likeable detectives are fully developed along with all the supporting characters. The intricate plotting and very appealing descriptions of Paris and its neighborhoods, food, and culture make these leisurely paced stories enjoyable and informative. -- Merle Jacob
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

In the fifth Hugo Marston espionage novel, Marston follows a trail that represents the downward slope of a young woman's ambitions. Marston, a former FBI agent and currently the security chief at the American embassy in Paris, embarks on an unofficial investigation for an old friend and colleague, Bart Denum, whose daughter, Amy, has moved to Paris from the U.S., seeking a career as a fashion model. And now she's gone missing. Marston, accompanied by his barely functioning but sometimes brilliant alcoholic sidekick, former CIA agent Tom Green, discovers that Amy recently worked as a stripper in a Pigalle club and that she took off to Barcelona with a man who promised her legitimate modeling work. Amy's betrayer is discovered, murdered, with a surprising suspect standing over the body. Lots of twists and turns, with a plot that shines a light on the plight of young women caught in profiteers' machinations. The switch of setting from Paris, the usual, lovingly detailed locale of these novels, to Barcelona, less well depicted, may not be well received by some fans, but this remains a solid entry in an engaging contemporary spy series.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Near the start of Pryor's intricately-plotted fifth Hugh Marston novel (after 2014's The Button Man), Hugh, the security chief at the American embassy in Paris, is supposed to meet Amy Dreiss, the 19-year-old stepdaughter of an old friend, Bart Denum, at a restaurant for breakfast, but she fails to show. Amy came to Paris hoping for a modeling career, but Hugh later discovers that the missing teen was working at a strip club instead. Hugh and sidekick Tom Green follow Amy's trail to Barcelona, where she traveled with a young man, Rubén Casteñada, who offered her a job there. When Hugh and Tom check out Casteñada's Barcelona address, they find his body on the apartment floor-and a blood-drenched Bart, who protests his innocence. Extraneous characters and digressions on their habits and history lend a certain aura of coziness to this gory tale. Agent: Ann Collette, Rees Literary Agency. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Kirkus Book Review

The head of security at the U.S. Embassy in Paris explores Barcelona in search of a wannabe model. Hugo Marston (The Button Man, 2014, etc.) is looking forward to some pancakes and bacon with his friend Bart Denum's stepdaughter, Amy Dreiss, at Breakfast in America, Paris's trendy answer to IHOP. What he gets is stood up. No call, no text, no Amy. Worried, he checks Amy's Marais apartment, where a neighbor tells him to check the Club Caterina in Pigalle. Instead of modeling, Amy's stripping, and she's left the country with Rubn Castaeda, of Estruch Entertainment Enterprises, who's promised her a better job in Spain. So Hugo heads south with his best friend, Tom Green, a freelance, free-drinking CIA agent who just can't help pissing off the cops. Green has a pied--terre in Barcelona the CIA will let them use, and pretty soon the two of them find Castaeda's body on the floor of his apartment. Tom does his best to annoy the local police by dragging his gun into the station, but Chief Inspector Bartoli Garcia, an old friend of Hugo's, gives the American the Spanish equivalent of carte blanche to run the investigation. Focusing on Castaeda's colleaguessmart Nisha Bhandari, aristocratic Leo Baresetti, and geeky Todd FinchHugo tries to connect the dots between Estruch and Los Matadors, a shadowy prison gang that may be responsible for the bull's head drawn in blood over Castaeda's body. But when a second corpse appears, he fears that time may be running out for Amy. Pryor lays it on thick: Hugo and Tom act out with frat-boy glee, the Rioja flows, and the Spanish authorities assign only English-speaking detectives for the convenience of their American chums. Strictly for those who think espionage is like Club Med without the beads. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

In the fifth Hugo Marston espionage novel, Marston follows a trail that represents the downward slope of a young woman's ambitions. Marston, a former FBI agent and currently the security chief at the American embassy in Paris, embarks on an unofficial investigation for an old friend and colleague, Bart Denum, whose daughter, Amy, has moved to Paris from the U.S., seeking a career as a fashion model. And now she's gone missing. Marston, accompanied by his barely functioning but sometimes brilliant alcoholic sidekick, former CIA agent Tom Green, discovers that Amy recently worked as a stripper in a Pigalle club and that she took off to Barcelona with a man who promised her legitimate modeling work. Amy's betrayer is discovered, murdered, with a surprising suspect standing over the body. Lots of twists and turns, with a plot that shines a light on the plight of young women caught in profiteers' machinations. The switch of setting from Paris, the usual, lovingly detailed locale of these novels, to Barcelona, less well depicted, may not be well received by some fans, but this remains a solid entry in an engaging contemporary spy series. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Near the start of Pryor's intricately-plotted fifth Hugh Marston novel (after 2014's The Button Man), Hugh, the security chief at the American embassy in Paris, is supposed to meet Amy Dreiss, the 19-year-old stepdaughter of an old friend, Bart Denum, at a restaurant for breakfast, but she fails to show. Amy came to Paris hoping for a modeling career, but Hugh later discovers that the missing teen was working at a strip club instead. Hugh and sidekick Tom Green follow Amy's trail to Barcelona, where she traveled with a young man, Rubén Casteñada, who offered her a job there. When Hugh and Tom check out Casteñada's Barcelona address, they find his body on the apartment floor—and a blood-drenched Bart, who protests his innocence. Extraneous characters and digressions on their habits and history lend a certain aura of coziness to this gory tale. Agent: Ann Collette, Rees Literary Agency. (June)

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