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Fatal Music

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
 Captain Paul Darac of the Brigade Criminelle arrives at a crime scene to find a woman's mutilated corpse. Initially routine, the case deepens and darkens into a complex enquiry that threatens to close in on Darac himself. But allegiances past and present must be set aside to unravel a tale of greed, deception and treachery that spans the social spectrum. It is among the winding streets of his own neighbourhood in Nice's old town, the Babazouk, that Darac faces his severest test yet.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 27, 2017
      Readers with weak stomachs should be prepared for a particularly grisly death in Morfoot’s intriguing second whodunit featuring French police captain Paul Darac (after 2016’s Impure Blood). A summons from his superior sends Darac, a jazz musician in his limited spare time, from a gig to the home of 71-year-old Jeanne Mesnel, whose bloated body has been found in her hot tub days after she expired. To Darac’s disgust, one of Mesnel’s arms has been chewed off at the shoulder, the other at the elbow, presumably by animals. These injuries appear to have occurred postmortem, consistent with an accidental death by drowning. But, of course, the inquiry will turn into a homicide investigation; the first indication that all is not what it seems comes from a witness who claims that a man with a criminal history of violence threatened to kill Mesnel three weeks earlier. The road to the logical solution is full of surprises that will please fair-play fans. Agent: Ian Drury, Sheil Land Associates (U.K.).

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2017
      Capt. Paul Darac's second recorded case begins with an elderly woman found dead in her hot tub and then gets into deeper and deeper waters.At 71, seamstress Jeanne Mesnel still enjoyed everything Nice had to offer--the weather, the wine, her house in the Chemin Leuze, the occasional skinny dip in her hot tub accompanied by the jazz recordings she loved--right up to the day, perhaps even the moment, she died. Although the Police Judicaire are called to the scene almost immediately, it seems clear she drowned accidentally. Clear but wrong, Darac (Impure Blood, 2016) gradually realizes. Suspicion is divided among Cristelle Daviot, the prostitute granddaughter who believed she'd inherit the estate; Taylor Walters-Halberg, the stunning American art curator who now actually has title to Jeanne Mesnel's house; and Marcel Battail, the neighboring tattoo artist who'd unwisely threatened to drown Mme. Mesnel because not everybody likes jazz. One person who does like it, however, is Darac, and he swiftly bonds with the dead woman over their shared passion--a bond that will lead him in new directions and reveal new suspects, not counting the ones he and Lt. Intern Christian Malraux improvidently sleep with. There'll be more murders, more revelations of past crimes, more romantic entanglements, and several false or incomplete solutions before Darac finally faces the inevitable conclusion to his labors: the moment when a sympathetic colleague asks him, "You're not very good at women just now, are you?" Lacking the political overtones of Morfoot's terrorist-tinged fiction debut, this more strictly domestic case seems overlong, more padded, fussier, smacking of much ado about nothing until the author detonates a string of fireworks at its tail.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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