Jim Hanlon
Jim Hanlon
I realize that some, perhaps many, here are no doubt familiar with the Inspector Maigret books by Georges Simenon. For those who don't know, they are short (130-150 pages) books about a Parisian police inspector who travels around France in the 1930s and after to solve crimes, chiefly murders. The books can be nicely evocative of place and time. I don't read a lot of who-done-its, and the books might frustrate those who do because sometimes there are few or no clues until the crime is solved, but I really enjoy these as a person who would love to travel through France in the 1930s. The whole series, about 75 books, has been re-translated and published by Penguin over the last few years. The books don't really build on each other, so a reader can drop in and out, without needing to work through them in order.
I've come to think of them has half-bottles of novel. Maybe even palate cleansers. To be picked up and read in a day or two between longer books. In this pandemic year, I've really enjoyed them and because there's so many, will continue to.
I've come to think of them has half-bottles of novel. Maybe even palate cleansers. To be picked up and read in a day or two between longer books. In this pandemic year, I've really enjoyed them and because there's so many, will continue to.