Philippe
Georget is a French television anchor and author of five crime novels. His
debut, L'été tous les chats s'ennuient, published by Éditions Jigal in 2009,
won
the SNCF Crime Fiction Prize and the City of Lens First Crime Novel Prize. Summertime,
All the Cats Are Bored (Europa Editions, 2013), the first Inspector Gilles
Sebag book, was translated from the French by Steven Rendall.
It’s miserably hot
on the French Mediterranean coast, as usual during the summer, and Inspector
Gilles Sebag is tired of his job. The air conditioner at the Perpignan police
headquarters breaks down with depressing frequency. The tedium of tourists and
petty crime along with the heat have him sleepwalking through his days. His
real interest is his family, and he’s consumed with the realization that his
children are growing up. Both of them are spending part of their vacation away
from the family for the first time and he misses them dreadfully. In addition,
he’s caught his wife Claire, whom he loves deeply, in a lie and he fears she is
having an affair. His anxiety is heightened when she decides to go on a cruise alone
for part of her vacation, since she has more time off than he does.
Sebag’s mind
is nowhere near work when a Dutch girl is found murdered on a beach. Then
another Dutch girl disappears. Still a few days later a third Dutch girl is
attacked with a knife during a failed kidnapping. The belief that a local
serial killer has singled out Dutch tourists for his attentions has caused a
slick Paris cop to be assigned to the force to serve as liaison between the
police on the ground and the French authorities in touch with the Dutch police.
Sebag despises him on sight and the feeling is mutual. The investigations flounder
while leads dissolve one after another. Sebag is singled out by the kidnapper
to receive a series of taunting messages, and his management wonders why. The
team follows thorough but plodding police procedures with some success but it’s
Sebag’s instincts that finally get them a true break.
The book is
labelled noir but Sebag is far from the average noir character. He dislikes
guns, doesn’t carry one unless he has to, and has to think to remember where he
put his service weapon. He runs marathons; his practice sessions give Georget frequent
reasons to describe the picturesque scenery of southern France. He enjoys
housework. He feels great compassion for those caught on the wrong side of the
law. The typical detective of crime fiction he is not.
I bought this
book for its title and was rewarded with a fine police procedural. Intricate and
well-executed plot; gorgeous writing, for which the translator must take some
credit; great behind-the-scenes look at the operations of an investigative law
enforcement team; powerful sense of place. A really good book!
Starred
review from Publishers Weekly and a PW Pick.
·
File Size: 1077 KB
·
Print Length: 429 pages
·
Publisher: Europa
Editions; Reprint edition (July 2, 2013)
·
Publication Date: October 8,
2019
Aubrey Hamilton ©2020
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It
projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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