August 26

Banquet of Beggars – Chris Lloyd

In Paris 1940, survival means sacrifice. Like most in the city, Detective Eddie Giral has already lost so much under Occupation: the people he once loved, the job he once believed in.

And his latest investigation into the murder of a black-marketeer has made it clearer than ever: Eddie is no longer just catching criminals. He’s working for them. Because when a German trader is the next to die, the authorities decide it’s innocent civilians who will pay the price – unless Eddie can find the killer in time.

As hunger grows, tensions rise and a fierce rebellion brews, Eddie will tread a dark path between doing whatever it takes to live with the enemy… and also with himself.

 

My thanks to the publishers for a review copy of Banquet of Beggars which I received through Netgalley.

 

“collaborator”

noun

disapproving

a person who works with an enemy who has taken control of their country

 

Collaborator is a word Eddie Giral is hearing far too often. It is shouted at him, hissed at him and muttered about him behind his back. It is not a word which Eddie accepts.  He is a Paris cop, he is doing the job he’s always done and is trying to do it to the best of his ability. But the citizens of Paris are increasingly distrustful of Eddie as it is 1940 and Paris is under German control. If Eddie is trying to enforce the law then the assumption is that he is working alongside the Germans and that makes him a collaborator with their oppressor, this means people are less likely to trust him and his ability to do his job will also be severely impacted.

An inability to gather information is a major hinderance to Eddie as his role is very much to keep his German “boss”, Major Hochstetter, informed of various aspects of criminal activity within the city. Eddie’s actual boss within the French police is Inspector Dax.  Both Dax and Hochstetter have an interest in Black Market activity within Paris. As the city residents approach the second Christmas under occupation there is an increasing shortage of many types of staples and this means black market trading is rife.

Banquet of Beggars opens with Eddie, not above the law in some instances, trying to join a large queue of hopeful shoppers who have had word a supply of butter may be available. The source of the rumour (and the source of the butter) are somewhat vague and there’s real doubt any butter which does materialise will be legally obtained but Eddie’s happy to take the chance and overlook any grey legal areas.  Unfortunately for Eddie his shopping is going to be interrupted by the discovery of a body but with hindsight he realises he may have moved a bit closer to gathering important information about the Paris Black Market. The body Eddie will find certainly has some connection to illegal trading – not least because someone has stuffed some butter into the corpse’s mouth. And that’s not the most unexpected thing he finds at the crime scene!

Tasked with finding more about the illegal traders in the city Eddie is frustrated to find his office space is to be shared with a new administrative assistant and also with his colleague Detective Boniface. Even during wartime and in the midst of personal drama and challenging work commitments it’s somewhat reassuring to see just how frustrated Eddie can be when having to deal with workplace disruptions and losing some of his precious desk space.

What I particularly love about Chris Lloyd’s Eddie Giral books is how Paris springs to life around the police, the soldiers and even the surly bar staff who Eddie delights in winding up. These books are not simply a crime story they are accompanied by a fascinating insight into the social history of Parisians during the 40’s. Aspects of their life are woven into the plot so we can see how they coped with rationing, increasing fear at the Gestapo’s “techniques” for gathering information, travel when there are fuel shortages and even how they choose to socialise. The depth of the world Chris Lloyd spins around his characters is an absolute treat for readers – small wonder he has won the HWA Gold Crown for Best Historical Fiction.

Eddie Giral is a man with a raft of problems.  To be fair, however, many of these problems come from Eddie’s own sardonic nature and his inability to keep the inside thoughts unspoken. His personal life is in turmoil as he has to keep his relationship secret from the authorities – Germans are not accepting of black women at this time and Eddie cannot afford to have Major Hochstetter discover a potential weakness in Eddie’s life which Hochstetter could exploit. This is equally true of Eddie’s son who has fled the city and Eddie doesn’t know if his son is safe or even if he is alive.

Beggars Banquet zips along at a very enjoyable pace. Eddie’s investigations into the Black Market trading gets waylaid by the appointment of a new judge who seems intent on making an example of two foolish small-time crooks by sentencing them to death by guillotine despite a lack of any real evidence. Eddie has known the crooks (brothers) for many years and is doing his best to prove their innocence despite the judge ignoring any attempts to see justice done – it will please the Germans that action is seen to be taken.  Eddie has also been asked to help secure the release of a young French protestor who got caught up in an anti-German event – this is more tricky for Eddie as she is being held by the Gestapo and Eddie will need Hochstetter’s help to secure her freedom.  But Hochstetter isn’t interested in helping Eddie.

It’s a glorious sequence of dilemma, drama and a swinging shift in power dynamics. Chris Lloyd keeps many plates spinning through the whole book and just as it looks like everything will come crashing down around the ears of Eddie Giral, well perhaps something does…

 

Crime fiction in a wartime setting – the Eddie Giral novels should not be missed. Essential reading.

 

 

Banquet of Beggars is published by Orion and is available in hardback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.waterstones.com/book/banquet-of-beggars/chris-lloyd/9781409190356?_gl=1*9urw77*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTMxNTIwODkyMC4xNzI0NzAzMjky*_ga_P4C39TQPV3*MTcyNDcwMzI5MS4xLjEuMTcyNDcwMzUzMy4wLjAuMA..

 

 

 

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September 21

Blood Summer – Steven Dunne

Two detectives from opposite sides of the planet join forces to hunt a ruthless killer in the South of France.

Commandant Serge Benoit is haunted by the terror attack in Nice, a crime scene he can see from his seafront apartment. Dispatched to a remote village, an hour’s drive from his home city, Benoit finds two brutally dismembered bodies. Who are the victims? Where did they come from? And who killed them? Benoit’s only clue is a cell phone with a single number in the memory…

Former FBI Agent, Michael Trent, is a wanted man in his homeland. Unable to return to America, he travels the world as an escapologist-for-hire, helping people in trouble to disappear. In Singapore, he is engaged by multi-millionaire Harry Renfrew who needs to relocate after receiving death threats from the Russian mafia.

After hiding Renfrew and his wife in a rustic French village, Trent assumes Renfrew’s identity to lay down a false trail to confound pursuers. After weeks of incident free globetrotting, Trent arrives in Barcelona for the final leg of his journey. But before he can congratulate himself on a job well done, he receives a shattering phone call…

 

Normally when I post a review I share the blurb then, in this space, I mention I am reviewing as part of a blog tour or I may thank a publisher for proving a review copy. Today I am reviewing Blood Summer, a book from my TBR pile which I had pre-ordered and received on release as I think Steven Dunne is a brilliant author and I absolutely had to read this book as soon as I could. Well done to past-life me, that was a great decicion you made a few weeks ago.

Blood Summer is in the world and if you like a dark, intelligent and pacy crime thriller then this is very much a book you should be reading.

The action takes place in rural France where two bodies have been found in a luxury villa on the edge of a small village near the South coast. Both victims appear to have suffered prior to death and their bodies were dismembered leaving investigators with little to go on. Commandant Benoit and his colleagues will take short term residence in the village while they conduct their investigations but this is not a small town crime.

Before the murders take place and the police become involved, the reader knows the victims. We have read about their flight from the East into Europe, how they travelled using fake passports and we understand why it was essential nobody knew who they were. For the couple we were rooting for and the former FBI Agent (Michael Trent) who had been employed to ensure their safety, this is a double blow for a reader.

Where did everything go wrong for Trent? Well, perhaps the incident which led to his departure from the FBI may have influenced his subsequent career choices but the memories of an operation which went wrong will never leave him. Now a second operational failure hangs over him and he must rely upon the support of the French police if he his to understand what happened. The problem for Trent is that he is very much a Person of Interest to the police and he must convince them of his innocence.

Despite the dark nature of the murders (and some of the other plotlines) there is humour and heart in this book too. Steven Dunne knows how to pack his stories with punch and I enjoyed every aspect of Blood Summer. Highly recommended.

Blood Summer is available in paperback and digital format and can be ordered here:

 

 

 

 

 

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March 19

The Night Gate – Peter May

In a sleepy French village, the body of a man shot through the head is disinterred by the roots of a fallen tree. A week later a famous art critic is viciously murdered in a nearby house. The deaths occurred more than seventy years apart.
Asked by a colleague to inspect the site of the former, forensics expert Enzo Macleod quickly finds himself embroiled in the investigation of the latter. Two extraordinary narratives are set in train – one historical, unfolding in the treacherous wartime years of Occupied France; the other contemporary, set in the autumn of 2020 as France re-enters Covid lockdown.

And Enzo’s investigations reveal an unexpected link between the murders – the Mona Lisa.

Tasked by the exiled General Charles de Gaulle to keep the world’s most famous painting out of Nazi hands after the fall of France in 1940, 28-year-old Georgette Pignal finds herself swept along by the tide of history. Following in the wake of Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa as it is moved from château to château by the Louvre, she finds herself just one step ahead of two German art experts sent to steal it for rival patrons – Hitler and Göring.

What none of them know is that the Louvre itself has taken exceptional measures to keep the painting safe, unwittingly setting in train a fatal sequence of events extending over seven decades.

Events that have led to both killings.

The Night Gate spans three generations, taking us from war-torn London, the Outer Hebrides of Scotland, Berlin and Vichy France, to the deadly enemy facing the world in 2020. In his latest novel, Peter May shows why he is one of the great contemporary writers of crime fiction.

 

My thanks to Sophie at Midas PR for my review copy and for the opportunity to join the blog tour for The Night Gate.

 

The Night Gate is an Enzo Macleod story.  Amazon describes it as “The Enzo Files Book 7”  today I describe it as my introduction to Enzo and the books of Peter May.  Actually “introduction” is a tad misleading as we own several Peter May books and Mrs Grab has been reading them before me.  From her feedback I already knew I would be in for a treat with The Night Gate – as usual Mrs Grab was quite right.

This story felt epic in scale.  Not only do events take place around France but the action also moves to Scotland and we get some trips to Nazi Germany too.  The narrative has a timeframe of seven decades taking in Europe during the dark days of World War Two and spinning forward to modern day where Europe is contending with a global pandemic.  This is one of the first books I have read which has incorporated Covid-19 into the narrative and I very much enjoyed that the author has acknowledged it but not made it a dominating factor in the story.  The pandemic is referenced, the requirement to mask up and the inconvenience it causes are noted but that’s it. It’s a thing to be dealt with.

The Night Gate sees Enzo invited to assist the police investigate a brutal and bloody murder.  His expertise is recognised and the local police feel his contribution would be beneficial.  Readers spend a little time with the vicitm as he approaches his final minutes of life and we understand how the murder ocurred, we just don’t know who was responsible.

Not content with giving Enzo one murder to consider, Peter May has a second dead body waiting to be uncovered.  This is not a recent murder, however, as the bones found appear to date back to the 1940’s – the corpse was likely an officer in the German army and he was buried in France with a bullet wound in the side of his head.  As the story unfolds and the identidy of the officer becomes clear Enzo realises there may be a connection between the two dead men. What could the connection be?  Well it all revolves around the most famous painting in the world…the Mona Lisa.

During the Second World War the French were terrified of the prospect of Paris falling and the Germans getting their hands on the treasures of the Louvre. The jewel of the collection was undoubtably Da Vinci’s masterpiece so the staff at the Louvre arranged for the painting to be shipped out of Paris and hidden in rural France, shipped from place to place to make it harder to find.  The principle focus of the wartime scenes is Georgette (George) Pignal.  She meets General De Galle in London and he tasks her with the responsibility of keeping the Mona Lisa away from the Germans.

George travels to Scotland where she receives training in the Western Isles to prepare her for life as an undercover operative in occupied France. When she finally returns to her homeland she is soon face to face with two German officers both have also been instructed to find the Mona Lisa but one is working for Hitler and the other for Göring.  These three characters are pawns in a bigger game and each serves a powerful master, failure is not an option. The parts of the story which feature George really had me gripped and I loved reading about her – the uncertainty around what may happen to her made her perils seem more vivid. Due to the passage of time between George’s story and Enzo’s the reader knows George will be dead in 2020. Knowing a key character for the story isn’t going to be alive in the modern day scenes raises the tension – George could be killed at any stage and you hope the author makes good use of that freedom. No spoilers though – grab yourself a copy of The Night Gate to learn about George’s fate.

A power struggle for the ownership of the world’s most famous painting was not the story I had been expecting from the opening chapters but Peter May gripped my attention from the outset and I was hooked.  As I mentioned at the start of my review, this was my introduction to Peter May’s books. A quick look at the catalogue of his earlier work shows that I have a lot of catching up to do.  However, if I enjoy the other books even half as much as I enjoyed The Night Gate then I know I have hours of reading pleasure stretching out in front of me – I can’t wait to get stuck in.

Returning fans will be delighted to be reunited with Enzo Macleod.  New readers can be confident of picking up The Night Gate and knowing they can jump straight into the action and still enjoy this clever and exciting thriller.

 

The Night Gate was published by Riverrun on 18 March 2021 and is available in hardback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B089CGRL5M/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

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May 21

Playing The Martyr – Ian G Moore

A retired Englishman is crucified on the banks of the Loire Valley and the peace and quiet of rural France is shattered. Blackmailed into leading the investigation, the recently widowed Juge d’instruction Matthieu Lombard feels shattered too.

An apparently innocuous victim, held in high regard by the French locals, who would target the Englishman? And why like this? Is someone using the 500-year-old legend of Joan of Arc to stir up tension between the French locals and the British expat community? And for what purpose?

Lombard must use all his experience to break down the wall of silence in small-town France and avoid the failure his bosses are hoping for. Will his half-English, half-French background help? Will it give him the freedom to move inside both communities or does it mean he’ll be trusted by neither?

While fighting his own grief and his own team, the case turns up a gut-churning connection with his late wife and lays bare something that he’s known all along; that the River Loire, like the valley itself, has a calm surface hiding a murderous undercurrent.

 

I received a copy of Playing the Martyr from the author in exchange for a fair and honest review.

 

I read a lot of crime novels. The majority of these stories are set in the UK or the US. I have a good understanding of their hierarchy of police squads and the respective judicial systems.  Playing The Martyr is set in France – the lead character is Matthieu Lombard, he is Juge d’instruction. I had no idea what that meant but I loved that Playing The Martyr had a “new” feel to it even before the story got going.

What an absolute treat it was to learn more about the position Juge Lombard holds, particularly as Lombard has not enjoyed the best of times of late and is facing a few political challenges to his authority. Overcoming personal tragedy, facing down rivals who would challenge his authority and dwelling too long on past events he cannot possibly change – the reader meets Lombard at an interesting time.

But personal issues aside – Lombard has a murder to solve.  An Englishman has been found crucified in the beautiful Loire Valley.  His murder (and other incidents which take place as the story unfolds) appear to have a connection to Joan of Arc. This does pose something of an issue for Lombard as the town where the murder occurred is desperately trying to establish a connection to the Saint so they can cash in on the tourist opportunities.  Is the murder a grotesque effort to put the town on the map or are the Joan of Arc references an elaborate red herring to put the police off the scent?

From being a bit of a Twitter stalker I know that Ian Moore lives in France and he does a terrific job of depicting this idyllic part of the world in Playing The Martyr.  It is great when authors capture the spirit of their chosen locations – too many books can be cut and paste stories into any random town or city.  Not so here – the sense of place was striking at times and I felt genuine pangs of wanderlust to make a visit to the Loire Valley and soak up some of the atmosphere.

I loved the time I spent with Playing The Martyr.  Lombard was a great lead character and I hope he returns in the not too distant future. Supporting cast were well defined and there were some fun and lighthearted moments to break up the darker twists.  Pleasingly I was nowhere near guessing the secrets to the story and that’s how I like it!

 

Playing the Martyr is a Pause Publications book and can be purchased in paperback and digital format here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Playing-Martyr-Ian-G-Moore-ebook/dp/B07LG71TGL/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=playing+the+martyr&qid=1555351140&s=gateway&sr=8-1

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April 26

Rocco and the Price of Lies – Adrian Magson

Murder by suicide? Three senior government officials – a judge, a politician, and an ex-police chief – are all dead by their own hands.

Inspector Lucas Rocco finds himself once more working for the Interior Ministry: undertaking an investigation meant to avoid a government scandal and ignoring unpalatable truths. He’s soon convinced that a common denominator must be at play…

Rocco uncovers top-level fraud, theft and deception. And when he narrowly survives an attempt on his life, he realises that he has nothing to lose by bringing the truth out in to the open – whatever the risks.

 

My thanks to The Dome Press for my review copy and to Emily Glenister for the opportunity to join the blog tour.

 

Rocco and the Price of Lies has presented me with a bit of a problem.  A good problem.  But my TBR pile is going to hate me.

I shall explain…

I love a series with recurring characters.  Once I find a series I enjoy I become compelled to read all the books in that series.  Rocco and the Price of Lies is the latest in a series of books which feature Inspector Lucas Rocco and I really, really enjoyed it. I now want to read more of Roccos adventures and a quick glance at the inside of the book suggests there are six titles awaiting me. Pray for my TBR.

In this latest outing Rocco is investigating the deaths of three prominent men (a judge, a senior government official and a politician).  Each of the men has taken his own life but the circumstances which led to their decisions have given the police cause to look more closely.

Each man received a letter which made them aware someone knew they had obtained expensive artwork under less than legitimate circumstances.  The reader knows the three men were purposely targeted but it is not immediately clear why.

Roccos investigations will see him working with the Interior Ministry.  He will become somewhat acquainted with the art world through the need to discuss forgeries and the problems art lovers experience when they own copies of valuable paintings.  This is an area I know nothing about so it made for fascinating reading – Adrian Magson spinning a great story around art fraud.

I found the story incredibly accessible. There are six Rocco stories before Price of Lies but I never felt I was failing to keep up with narrative or established characters. The author keeps events zipping along and I never felt there was a lull in events or scenes were padded out. I loved the direct and often humorous approach Rocco adopts in his interactions and I warmed to him immediately.

I was adding more Rocco novels to my reading wishlist before I reached the last chapters of this book.  Delighted to have discovered a new series I can enjoy and I am very much looking forward to catching up on the earlier stories. Highly recommended.

 

Rocco and the Price of Lies is published by The Dome Press and is available in paperback and digital format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07NGTMZQR/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

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