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Cargando... Murder in Passypor Cara Black
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Fast paced. I liked this better than any of the previous books in the series. It's always hard to start in the middle of a series-- and I was constantly feeling like I was missing something and/or being set up for the next book to come along. Let's just say I wouldn't want to be friends with Aimee-- not good for your health and the favors all seem to flow in one direction. She's pretty convinced she's the good guy, but I thought I might not have come to that conclusion myself based on this book. Lots of detail and descriptions, but it just didn't flow well for me and I'll probably give the rest of the series a miss. Once more Aimee Leduc buys a crisp baguette and runny Brie and stows them away in her thrift shop designer bag, then straightens her thrift shop designer little black dress, slips on her thrift shop designer black heels and goes off to serve the interests of justice. This time her policeman godfather's accused of killing his girlfriend and Aimee, with able assistance from Rene, must bravely defend justice from the flics. For those who've never read the Leduc series, may I suggest that you begin at the beginning and then find something better to read when the repetition becomes tedious? (Like an earlier reviewer, I got this one free on Kindle and didn't find it worth finishing. same old same old) This time out, Aimee Leduc finds herself involved in a case in Passy, one of the many neighborhoods which make up the city of Paris (although arrondissements sounds classier than neighborhoods). Her godfather, Commissaire Morbier, is worried about the new woman in his life, a person who has made him feel young again. Xavierre d’Eslay is a member of the uppermost level of the bourgeoisie although her roots are in the Basque region between Spain and France. Xavierre isn’t taking or returning any of his calls. He knows she is very busy preparing for her daughter’s wedding but Morbier isn’t blessed with self-confidence when dealing with the women in his life. He enlists Aimee’s help, asking her to speak to Xavierre just to make sure all is well between them. Aimee arrives at the d’Eslay mansion at the tail end of her daughter’s rehearsal dinner. Xavierre doesn’t have time to talk to Aimee; something seems to have upset her and caused an early end to the party. Aimee realizes that whatever is bothering Xavierre has nothing to do with Morbier. She has pulled her partner, Rene Friant, along with her but as they prepare to leave, Aimee hears a noise and senses that she is being watched. A piece of Xavierre’s scarf is on the bushes and the woman herself is on the ground, strangled by the scarf. Morbier is arrested quickly, case closed but neither Aimee nor Rene are going to leave that miscarriage of justice to determine this decent man’s fate. Morbier gets a message to Aimee, telling her not to trust anyone, especially the police, because there is a “leak”. Aimee doesn’t know to what “leak” refers but she soon learns that Xavierre was a member of the Basque group, ETA, when she was young. The political problem of Basque separatism is somehow involved in her death. French security is involved because ETA doesn’t discriminate between France and Spain – both are the enemy. As with all the books in the series, MURDER IN PASSY takes off fast as Aimee and Rene try to prove Morbier had nothing to do with murder. French Security and ETA terrorists keep the Leduc Detective Agency always moving only one small step ahead. There isn’t a book in the eleven book series that isn’t worth reading more than once. MURDER IN PASSY keeps the streak alive. Cara Black and seven other authors, Timothy Hallinan, Leighton Gage, Yrsa Sigurdardottir, Michael Sears and Stan Trollip (together writing as Michael Stanley), Dan Waddell, and Jeffrey Siger, each contribute a post each week to their blog, Murder Is Everywhere. Cara posted an engrossing and informative piece on the Basque movement that is worth reading and will make the Basque element in MURDER IN PASSY informative and explain the seriousness of the problem Aimee and Rene find themselves in. The link to Cara’s blog post is http://murderiseverywhere.blogspot.com/2011/03/annie-girardot-and-basques.html sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Fiction.
Mystery.
HTML:The eleventh Aimée Leduc investigation set in Paris Business is booming for Parisian private investigator Aimée Leduc. But she finds time to do a favor for her godfather, Commissaire Morbier, who asks her to drop by the gorgeous Passy home of his girlfriend, Xavierre d??Eslay, a haut bourgeois matron of Basque origin. Xavierre has been so busy with her daughter??s upcoming wedding that she has stopped taking Morbier??s calls, and he??s worried something serious is going on. When Aimée crashes the rehearsal dinner, Xavierre is discovered strangled in her own yard, and circumstantial evidence makes Morbier the prime suspect. To vindicate her godfather, Aimée must find the real killer. Her investigation leads her to police corruption, radical Basque terrorists, and a kidnapp No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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