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Paperback My Friend Maigret Book

ISBN: B01N6N39AX

ISBN13: 9780241206393

My Friend Maigret

(Book #31 in the Inspector Maigret Series)

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Book Overview

"A writer as comfortable with reality as with fiction, with passion as with reason." --John Le Carr

" My Friend Maigret] is a great vehicle for passing the dead minutes...by pondering, with Maigret, the challenges of order versus chaos, how to serve justice, if it needs serving--and an island filled with 'nothing but phenomena.'" --The New York Times Book Review


Inspector Maigret investigates the murder of a small-time crook on a Mediterranean island

While Inspector Pyke of Scotland Yard is staying with Maigret to observe his methods, Maigret receives word of a murder in the Midi on the island of Porquerolles. The victim is Marcellin, a man who claims to have been Maigret's friend but was actually a criminal whose girlfriend, a sex worker, Maigret helped out of a scrape years ago.

Travelling to the island, Maigret and Pyke must solve a mystery that takes them deep into the shadowy world of art forgery and the heart of an isolated community with eccentric inhabitants--and no shortage of secrets. My Friend Maigret is a page-turning mystery set in the sun-drenched south of France about what can happen when past acquaintances resurface.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

One of his most pleasant and amusing

Like all of his Maigret books, Simenon never has his Chief Inspector take himself too seriously. In this novel, we have a very thoughtful and introspective Maigret. While working on routine matters in Paris, Maigret is asked to let an Inspector from Scotland Yard "shadow" him so that the English can learn the 'techniques' of the famous Maigret. The man who comes to watch him is Mr.Pyke (we are never given his first name) who is the epitome of the 'stiff upper lip public school' chap. When Maigret is called to a small island of the coast of the Riviera, he takes the Englishman with him. There has been a murder on the Island of a man who called himself a 'friend of Maigret'. No one has been allowed to leave the Island so that the murderer has to still be there. In his quiet way of watching and asking 'uninteresting' questions, Maigret is able to root out the killers, and their establish their motive. As many of Simenon's stories, the mystery itself is there to give Maigret something to do. This is an island that has only two families on it. They are fisherman and have lived this way for centuries. What's really the reason for the story is to give Simenon a chance to explain a culture that will soon disappear. With the coming of war and then the advent of multi-media, this once quiet corner of Europe will become as homogenous as the rest of the world. Desolee. Zeb Kantrowitz

Maigret squirms under observation

A Scotland Yard detective admires Maigret and gets permission to follow him around and observe his methods. Maigret, who has no methods, is discomfited. "Mr. Pyke looked at everything and said nothing." Awkwardly enough, the case that Mr. Pyke gets to observe concerns the shooting of a thug who claimed that Maigret was his friend. And in fact, Maigret had long ago been kind to his consumptive girlfriend. Was the murder a strike against Maigret, or is something else afoot? This delightful little book perfectly captures the ambiance of the Midi and presents us with some playful insights into the competitive male psyche. Simenon's disciplined prose is real literature, much more so than many a serious novel with literary pretensions.

A classic in a great series

An inspector from Scotland Yard comes to France to observe the police methods of the great detective Maigret as he investigates a crime. As the stoic British policeman follows Maigret around, both men feel awkward because Maigret has no methods, other than his characteristic investigative technique of immersing himself in the atmosphere of the place and in the lives of the persons involved until he knows them so well that he understands how the crime must have happened. This is a classic Maigret.
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