Parisian P.I. Aimee Leduc is attacked and blinded during an investigation. Can she solve her case without her sight-and when her own life is in danger? Parisian private investigator Aimee Leduc is all dressed up in her new Chinese silk jacket, supposedly a designer's "exclusive," for dinner with a difficult client at an elegant restaurant in the Bastille district. She is chagrined to see that the woman seated at the very next table is wearing an identical jacket. When the woman leaves her cell phone on the table, Aimee follows her to return it and is attacked in the shadowy Passage Boule Blanche. When she regains consciousness, Aimee finds that she is blind. Nevertheless, she is told she is lucky; the woman she was following was found in the next passage, murdered. Aimee is determined to identify her attacker. Was he actually a serial killer targeting showy blondes, as the police insist? Was he really after the other woman? Or was Aimee his intended victim?
I loved this book. Rene plays a much larger role which allows us to learn more about him and to see Aimee through his eyes. I feel like I got to know them both better. Aimee losing her sight is such an interesting and unique twist. She is no longer the fearless detective. She is vulnerable and it only makes her personality more interesting and complex. I can't wait to continue with this series. It's a fun escape and always makes me want to wear bright red Chanel lipstick.
Great characters and ambiance
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Black just keeps getting better and better, and "Murder in the Bastille" is her best Aimee Leduc mystery yet. Aimee's blindness has given her a depth that only comes throught trial and experience and Black has adroitly handled her heroine's inner growth. The independence that Aimee has shown in the previous books here takes on an edgy sadness that fills in her character and really brings her to life. Her partner, Rene, too, comes into his own in this 4th book of the series.The plot of "Bastille" is smooth and the considerable action connects readily. As always, Paris itself is a character, and the dark dreams and gritty contemporary reality of the city are as rich and delicious as an espress on a rainy day. Escape to Paris as easily as opening the cover.
Leduc Est Formidable!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
Murder in the Bastille is my first Aimee Leduc mystery, but it won't be my last. Not only do the backstreet Paris scenes ring true, so do the complex relationships. Readers who bring a little something to the book themselves will enjoy it more than dullards who look for simplistic answers with every loose thread neatly snipped. Cara Black's in media res approach makes me want to go backwards and forwards in this intelligent series. Highly recommended.
Aimee Leduc Storms the Bastille
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
This is my first Aimee Leduc novel, and I am happy to say that it came as a pleasant surprise. On my previous visit to Paris (in 1999), I was startled to see tough paratroopers armed with automatic rifles at the Chatelet-Les Halles metro station patrolling the platforms and corridors. Paris is no longer the city of Maurice Chevalier, or even Georges Simenon: What we have here is a rougher and edgier city with a compact tourist core surrounded by miles of slumlike banlieus along the edges.Cara Black's flics barely have the time to deal with murder, when other events like terror-driven explosions and a horrible TGV accident in the station. Rumanian thugs in cheap exercise suits abound, selling their muscle to developers and with an eye on the main chance, whatever it may be. The Bastille area, site of a notorious castle/prison torn down in 1789, is now dominated by the huge Opera Bastille. The local neighborhood, however, is being forcibly torn down and redeveloped.In walks private investigator Aimee Leduc. In the first few pages of MURDER IN THE BASTILLE, she is brutally attacked in an alley and blinded as a result of a damaged artery. For most of the novel, she can see nothing around her. The onus for the investigation falls on her dwarfish partner Rene, with occasional help en passant from overburdened police officers who knew her father on the force.I look forward to reading the other novels in the series.
Embraceable Aimee
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
Murder in the Bastille is the adventure that draws the reader to Aimee Leduc's side from the beginning. The story begins with Aimee in a restaurant. At a nearby table, she spots a woman who is wearing an identical Chinese silk top. When the woman leaves, Aimee notices that she has left behind her cell phone and goes after her to return it. Down a side street in pursuit of the woman, Aimee is violently attacked. When she comes to, she is blind. From here, readers, hone all your senses, and go with Aimee on this new journey to find the answers to this multi-faceted mystery. I particularly enjoyed "Bastille" because we get to see different dimensions of Aimee as a person, given her new vulnerabilities. Her condition also gives us a chance to view Rene in a broader light as his role becomes instrumental in putting all the pieces together. If you want someone to show you around Paris, with an attitude of free-spirit and freshness, jump into Aimee's pack and hang on tight. Cara Black, has proven to be, once again, a worthy and able tourguide through the Paris streets.
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