The Paris Directive: A Novel
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Christopher Reich: "Outstanding! A beguiling, atmospheric, and entirely entertaining novel that promises intrigue and suspense from the very first page. Inspector Mazarelle is a wonderful creation: a world weary, gimlet-eyed detective who must rouse himself for one last case. I expect to see him one day in the pantheon of greats alongside Poirot, Maigret, Brunetti and Zen." —Christopher Reich, New York Times bestselling author of Rules of DeceptionIn a Berlin hotel room in the late 1990s, two former French intelligence agents hire Klaus Reiner, a ruthlessly effective killer, to eliminate an American industrialist vacationing in southwestern France. Reiner easily locates his target in the small Dordogne village of Taziac, but the hit is compromised when three innocent people are in the wrong place at the wrong time. Enter Inspector Paul Mazarelle. Formerly of Paris but now living in Taziac, the inspector is charged with bringing his experience and record of success in the capital to bear on the gruesome quadruple homicide at the height of tourist season.Both Mazarelle’s investigation and Reiner’s job become complicated when Molly, a New York City district attorney and daughter of two of the victims, arrives to identify the bodies and begins asking questions. All evidence points to Ali Sedak, a local Arab handyman, but Mazarelle and Molly have doubts, forcing Reiner to return to Taziac to ensure they see things as he arranged them. Little does anyone in the picturesque French countryside know how politically charged this crime is: its global ramifications, stemming from the NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, could overshadow everything.Tailored in crisp prose, this tantalizing and skillfully written thriller possesses all the luxury refinements of the best international intrigue. Jay’s novel chills, excites, and engrosses, pitting a smooth, calculating villain against an earthy, sympathetic Frenchman whose twilight career is suddenly heating up."Jay’s entertaining first novel pays homage to George Simenon and his legendary detective, Inspector Maigret.... The main draw is the charming, indomitable Inspector Mazarelle, who enjoys puffing on his old pipe, stopping for cognac in the middle of the day, and dining on sausages and lentils or his favorite dish, duck confit, at the Café Valon. Mystery fans will look forward to seeing more of him in the promised sequel." —Publishers Weekly"Gerald Jay has woven threads of police procedural, espionage, rural noir, ‘acts of barbarism,’ and Gallic charm into a story that will be a great fit for almost any crime fan." —Booklist, starred review
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Paris police Inspecteur Paul Mazarelle transferred to the sleepy Dordogne when his wife decided to return to the village of her birth to spend her final days. A year after her death, he's lonely and unfulfilled by rural life and policing. But the brutal murders of two American couples put a spring in his step. What he doesn't know is that the murders were a professional hit commissioned at the highest levels of French government. The pseudonymous Jay has woven threads of police procedural, espionage, rural noir, acts of barbarism, and Gallic charm into a story that will be a great fit for almost any crime fan. Mazarelle is a memorable flic hulking, disheveled, intuitive, and world-weary. The hitman is an East German who has ardently embraced capitalism and conspicuous consumption (the book is set in 1999). The American daughter of two of the victims arrives to ask some pointed questions, and she is strikingly attractive, smart, and very direct; and the natives of the Dordogne are engagingly and quirkily French. This is the start of a series, and the only disappointing note is that, upon dispatching the killer, Mazarelle returns to Paris. It's likely that many readers would love to spend more time in Jay's Dordogne.--Gaughan, Thomas Copyright 2010 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
Set in 1999 and lightly cloaked in thriller garb, the pseudonymous Jay's entertaining first novel pays homage to George Simenon and his legendary detective, Inspector Maigret. When the young wife of Paris policeman Inspector Mazarelle falls terminally ill, the couple relocate to the village of Taziac in the Dordogne region of southwest France, where hired assassin Klaus Reiner happens to be on the prowl. Soon Mazarelle is investigating the slaughter of four American tourists in the farmhouse where they were staying, a crime loosely connected to the real-life accidental NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade. Never mind the international intrigue. The main draw is the charming, indomitable Inspector Mazarelle, who enjoys puffing on his old pipe, stopping for cognac in the middle of the day, and dining on sausages and lentils or his favorite dish, duck confit, at the Cafe Valon. Mystery fans will look forward to seeing more of him in the promised sequel. Agent: Georges Borchardt, Georges Borchardt Inc. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Book Review
Pseudonymous Jay's debut plops a killer-for-hire down in the placid Dordogne village of Taziac to produce a mashup of cloak-and-dagger and cozy replete with murder and fine dining. A cleaning lady shows up at L'Ermitage to find vacation renter Ben Reece, a New York art dealer, gruesomely slain. A further search of the villa discloses the equally dead bodies of Reece's wife and the wife of his old friend Schuyler Phillips. The local flics assume that the killer is the absent Monsieur Phillips. Once they find his corpse too, they redirect their suspicions to handyman Ali Sedak. All of which proves that these cops are idiots, because readers already know that two retired French intelligence agents who still have a stake in the game have dispatched Klaus Reiner, a freelance assassin of many names, to Taziac on a murderous mission. Even after the hapless cops ask that Inspector Paul Mazarelle, a local celebrity, be assigned to the case, things are slow to improve for the forces of law and order. Mazarelle's first move is to arrest Ali Sedak, even though he suspects that the evidence against him is a little too suspiciously generous. It's not until Ali's death in his cell that the wheels of justice start moving in the right direction. By that time the Reeces' daughter Molly, a Manhattan assistant district attorney, has arrived on the scene to be wined and dined and menaced by the suave Reiner in his improbable guise as Pierre Barmeyer. By-the-numbers plotting, with a killer whose motivations make you wonder how he's lasted so long; a police hero who's bound to return in further installments; and some meals you'll remember long after the 10 fatalities have faded from memory.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
*Starred Review* Paris police Inspecteur Paul Mazarelle transferred to the sleepy Dordogne when his wife decided to return to the village of her birth to spend her final days. A year after her death, he's lonely and unfulfilled by rural life and policing. But the brutal murders of two American couples put a spring in his step. What he doesn't know is that the murders were a professional hit commissioned at the highest levels of French government. The pseudonymous Jay has woven threads of police procedural, espionage, rural noir, "acts of barbarism," and Gallic charm into a story that will be a great fit for almost any crime fan. Mazarelle is a memorable flic—hulking, disheveled, intuitive, and world-weary. The hitman is an East German who has ardently embraced capitalism and conspicuous consumption (the book is set in 1999). The American daughter of two of the victims arrives to ask some pointed questions, and she is strikingly attractive, smart, and very direct; and the natives of the Dordogne are engagingly and quirkily French. This is the start of a series, and the only disappointing note is that, upon dispatching the killer, Mazarelle returns to Paris. It's likely that many readers would love to spend more time in Jay's Dordogne. Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Set in 1999 and lightly cloaked in thriller garb, the pseudonymous Jay's entertaining first novel pays homage to George Simenon and his legendary detective, Inspector Maigret. When the young wife of Paris policeman Inspector Mazarelle falls terminally ill, the couple relocate to the village of Taziac in the Dordogne region of southwest France, where hired assassin Klaus Reiner happens to be on the prowl. Soon Mazarelle is investigating the slaughter of four American tourists in the farmhouse where they were staying, a crime loosely connected to the real-life accidental NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade. Never mind the international intrigue. The main draw is the charming, indomitable Inspector Mazarelle, who enjoys puffing on his old pipe, stopping for cognac in the middle of the day, and dining on sausages and lentils or his favorite dish, duck confit, at the Café Valon. Mystery fans will look forward to seeing more of him in the promised sequel. Agent: Georges Borchardt, Georges Borchardt Inc. (June)
[Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLCReviews from GoodReads
Citations
Jay, G. (2012). The Paris Directive: A Novel . Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Jay, Gerald. 2012. The Paris Directive: A Novel. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Jay, Gerald. The Paris Directive: A Novel Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2012.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Jay, G. (2012). The paris directive: a novel. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Jay, Gerald. The Paris Directive: A Novel Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2012.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
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Libby | 1 | 1 | 0 |