Inspector Cadaver (Inspector Maigret Mysteries)
Three vintage Maigret novels by legendary mystery author Georges Simenon
One of the world ?s most successful crime writers, Georges Simenon has thrilled mystery lovers since 1931 with his matchless creation Inspector Maigret. In My Friend Maigret, Inspector Maigret investigates the murder of a small-time crook on a Mediterranean island. Told in Simenon?s spare, unsentimental prose, Inspector Cadaver is a haunting exploration of provincial hypocrisy and snobbery, in which Maigret encounters a rival sleuth from his past. In Maigret and the Man on the Boulevard, Simenon?s tenacious detective pieces together the life of a man who for three years lived a secret life?until he is found stabbed to death in an alleyway.
Inspector Cadaver (Inspector Maigret Mysteries) Accessories
Maigret and the Man on the Boulevard (Inspector Maigret Mysteries)
My Friend Maigret (Inspector Maigret Mysteries)
The Bar on the Seine (Penguin Mysteries)
The Madman of Bergerac
Friend of Madame Maigret (Inspector Maigret Mysteries)
The Hotel Majestic (Penguin Mysteries)
Maigret and the Wine Merchant
Lock 14 (Inspector Maigret Mysteries)
A Man's Head (Inspector Maigret Mysteries)
The Yellow Dog (Inspector Maigret Mysteries)
Inspector Cadaver (Inspector Maigret Mysteries) Reviews
What Maigret finds is a village divided into two factions. In most of his novels, he deploys a team of detectives as he rushes to solve crimes. Unfortunately, "Inspector Cadaver" is not one his better mysteries. Those spreading the rumors and those hiding a village secret. The hope is that Maigret will be able to quiet the malicious rumors.
What makes "Inspector Cadaver" interesting is that Maigret is out of his element. Yet, like Ella Fitzgerald or Frank Sinatra even his lesser works are better than average. He wrote over four hundred novels of which seventy five featured his detective hero, Inspector Jules Maigret. Readers usually see Inspector Maigret in his Parisian element.
He is going to have to solve this mystery only with his knowledge of human behavior.
A colleague asks Inspector Maigret to go to small village on the Atlantic Coast to help his family sort out a problem.
A young man has died and villagers are beginning to gossip.
The villagers are not Parisians and he does not have his team of detectives to help him out.
Like any great stylist, some of his works are better than others.
But in the end, we know that the mystery will always be solved due to Maigret penetrating psychological insights.
Over the years, publishers have printed over 500 million copies of his work.
Georges Simenon had an amazing career.
Maigret is surprised to discover that a former policeman, Inspector Cavre (known as Inspector Cadaver) now working as a private detective, is also destined for Saint-Aubin. Georges Simenon was the author of over 100 Inspector Maigret mystery stories. Simenon seems to have fallen under the radar in recent decades but in recent years he seems to have been rediscovered by a new generation of mystery/detective story fans. Simenon also authored dozens of books described as "romans durs", or `hard stories' that had a darker tone than his Maigret novels. As the plot develops Maigret and the reader is introduced to life in this isolated village. "Inspector Cadaver is one of Penguin's latest Inspector Maigret Mystery reissues, along with My Friend Maigret (Inspector Maigret Mysteries) and Maigret and the Man on the Boulevard (Inspector Maigret). Simenon's Inspector Maigret mysteries are often compared to Christie's Hercule Poirot mysteries.
L. The town gossip seems to point its ugly finger in the direction of the Magistrate's brother-in-law and Maigret agrees (reluctantly) to travel to Saint-Aubin to help the brother-in-law out. Penguin Books has begun to reissue some of those Maigret mysteries (usually in groups of three mysteries) and the New York Review of Books Press has reissued many of his `romans durs'. There are many resemblances to be sure. Although the town itself is fictional it is planted by Simenon squarely in the Vendee region of France, southwest of Paris near the Atlantic coast. Inspector Maigret stories also appeared in film and TV versions. "Inspector Cadaver" is an excellent example of the story-telling art of Georges Simenon and well worth reading. This is very evident in "Inspector Cadaver" but it is not so intrusive that it gets in the way of the story.
There are some major differences however worth noting. Simenon does a wonderful job describing the sense of isolation Maigret feels at entering into this self-contained and xenophobic world. A young working-class man has been found dead apparently run over by a train. Simenon lived in the area during WWII (the story was originally published in 1943 under the title "Maigret's Rival") and, as portrayed by Simenon, Saint-Aubin was an isolated, self-contained area which rivals Peyton Place as far as its perchance for gossip and sense of isolation from the rest of the world is concerned.
Maigret's unofficial investigation is made more complex (but more interesting to the reader) as he deals with old family ties, small town snobbery, class-distinctions, and a general aversion to strangers. They were immensely popular in the 1930s through the 1960s. Fleisig. The chief differences seem to me to be Simenon's darker touch and his rather cynical feelings toward the more `respectable' members of French society.
"Inspector Cadaver" finds Maigret in the village of Saint-Aubin-les Marais. Maigret finds himself in Saint-Aubin at the request of a Magistrate in Paris. Simenon treats words with respect and doesn't use more than seems necessary to advance the story. The efforts by Inspector Cadaver also make Maigret's life more difficult (and actually lead me to conclude that the original title is the more apt of the two).
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