-
Recent Posts
== Currently off the shelf ==
Categories
Archives
Top Posts & Pages
- Top 20 Amnesia Mystery Movies
- 9 of the Best by Ellery Queen
- The Carey Treatment (1972) - Tuesday's Overlooked Film
- The Perry Mason movies (1934-37)
- Top 20: Private Eye movies
- In Praise of ... COLUMBO
- John Dickson Carr top 10 poll
- THE LETTER (1927) by Somerset Maugham
- THE QUIET AMERICAN (1955) by Graham Greene
- THE YELLOW DOG (1931) by Georges Simenon
Blogroll
- Aficionado
- At the Scene of the Crime
- Battered, Tattered, Yellowed, & Creased
- Beneath the Stains of Time (aka Detection by Moonlight)
- Bitter Tea and Mystery
- Book Dirt
- Chess, Comics, Crosswords, Books, Music, Cinema
- Classic Mysteries
- Clothes in Books
- Confessions of a Mystery Novelist….
- Death Can Read
- Do You Write Under Your Own Name
- Existential Ennui
- Film Dirt
- Films on the Box
- Howdunit
- In Search of the Classic Mystery Novel
- In so many words …
- Kaggsy's Bookish Ramblings
- La morte sa leggere
- Mike Ripley's getting away with murder
- Mrs. Peabody Investigates
- My Reader's Block
- Mystery File
- Noir of the Week
- Noirish
- Novels by Candlelight
- Past Offences
- pattinase
- Paul D Brazill
- Pretty Sinister Books
- Riding the High Country
- Sheldon Times – Sheldon Hall on Films and TV
- Sweet Freedom
- The Dark Time
- The Invisible Event
- The Locked Room
- The Passing Tramp
- The Rap Sheet
- The Stalking Moon
- Tip the Wink
- Vanished Into Thin Air
- West 1 Girl
Category Archives: Maigret
PIETR THE LATVIAN (1931) by Georges Simenon
This novel marked the official literary debut of Detective Chief Inspector Jules Amédée François Maigret of the Paris Police Judiciaire when it first appeared in serial form in the summer and autumn of 1930. It was however the fifth in … Continue reading
The new face of Maigret
It was announced quite a while ago that Rowan Atkinson, best known for playing Mr Bean and Blackadder, was the surprise choice to portray Jules Maigret in a new series of British feature-length TV episodes for ITV. Filming has now … Continue reading
Posted in Georges Simenon, Maigret, Paris
40 Comments
The Man on the Eiffel Tower (1949)
Charles Laughton plays Inspector Maigret in this highly atypical Hollywood movie, shot in colour and on location in Paris. Despite a cast that includes Franchot Tone and Burgess Meredith (who also took over as director at the last-minute), this is … Continue reading
MY FRIEND MAIGRET (1949) by Georges Simenon
There is evil in paradise in this Maigret story, which some critics (including Julian Symons) consider to be among the best of the series (no mean feat with over 100 to choose from). It was later adapted for French TV, … Continue reading
2013 Vintage Mystery Challenge – completed
The indefatigable and always welcoming Bev of My Reader’s Block regularly corrals us mystery buffs with her Vintage Mystery Reading Challenge, which focuses on mystery fiction published pre-1960 to be eligible for inclusion. I’ve had a great time this year with … Continue reading
Posted in 2013 Vintage Mystery Challenge, Albert Campion, Boileau-Narcejac, Edgar Wallace, Elisabeth Sanxay Holding, George Axelrod, Georges Simenon, James M. Cain, Maigret, Margaret Scherf, Margery Allingham, Michael Gilbert, Nero Wolfe, Philo Vance, Rex Stout, Richard Matheson, Sherwood King, SS Van Dine, Stanley Ellin, Wade Miller, Whit Masterson, World War II
26 Comments
MAIGRET SETS A TRAP (1955) by Georges Simenon
A psychopath is stalking the women of a small district in Paris and Jules Maigret of the Police Judiciaire is under pressure to find the culprit. Pretty soon, after a failed attack, an arrest is made – but then another … Continue reading
THE YELLOW DOG (1931) by Georges Simenon
This is one the first Maigret novels. Georges Simenon chronicled some 100 of his cases over a period of 40 years but initially churned them out in a blaze of activity – indeed this was the first of seven Maigret … Continue reading
MAIGRET STONEWALLED (1931) by Georges Simenon
If one thinks of the great detective story writers from the Golden Age that have received serious and continued critical attention over the decades, the names that immediately spring to mind are Poe, Doyle, Christie, Hammett and Chandler. The only … Continue reading
THE JUDGE AND HIS HANGMAN (1950) by Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Originally published in German in 1950 as ‘Der Richter und sein Henker’ by Friedrich Dürrenmatt, this was the first of two books featuring Kommissar Hans Bärlach of the Berne police (they have since been collected in an omnibus volume as … Continue reading