Ignorance is bliss, unless of course it causes you to
overlook a fascinating French author with some intriguing books under his belt.
Fair to say I hadn’t heard of Dard until a couple of months ago and Pushkin
Vertigo pinged me a copy of Bird in a Cage.
Dard was French, born in 1921 and died in 2000. He wrote
over 300 novels in his lifetime, including 173 in his San-Antonio series.
(Probably a couple too many for me to contemplate, assuming they ever get
translated!)
According to Wikipedia…. Frédéric
Dard wrote 173 adventures of San-Antonio, of which millions of copies were
sold. A San-Antonio is likely to be found in any French household. Detective
Superintendent Antoine San-Antonio is a kind of French James Bond without
gadgets, flanked by two colleagues, the old, sickly but wise inspector César
Pinaud and the gargantuesque inspector Alexandre-Benoît Bérurier. He is a
member of the French secret service and has to fulfill impossible missions
given by "Le Vieux" (the Old Man), later known as
"Achilles", the head of the French police. With the help of his
colleagues he always succeeds through various adventures.
The link to the full Frederic Dard entry is here.
Bird in a Cage (2016)
She seems alone and defenceless when he speaks to her in the
busy brasserie, all decked out for Christmas Eve. When she invites him back to
her apartment, he can't believe his luck. Later, when her husband's body lies
dead at the foot of the Christmas tree he realises his nightmare is only
beginning... Take care when unwrapping your presents, they can sometimes
contain nasty surprises.
Frederic Dard (1921-2000) was one of the best known and
loved French crime writers of the twentieth century. Enormously prolific, he
wrote more than three hundred thrillers, suspense stories, plays and
screenplays, under a variety of noms de plume, throughout his long and
illustrious career, which also saw him win the 1957 Grand prix de litterature
policiere for The Executioner Cries, available from Pushkin Vertigo in Autumn
2016.
A taut psychological prison-thriller from Frederic Dard, one
of France's most popular post-war authors
A cop receives a mission - to win the confidence of an enemy
spy, currently in prison, and so to expose destroy his spy ring. What better
way to allay his suspicions than for the policeman to enter the prison himself,
posing as a criminal? So, Frank and Hal end up sharing a cell, but who is the
spy and who is the cop? And who will win their claustrophobic game of cat and
mouse? Memorably filmed by Robert Hossein in 1955, this tense and brilliantly
original thriller is one of Dard's most powerful.
Oh, these do sound like great moir stories, Col! I like the premises of them. And he was so prolific! I probably wouldn't be able to read that many books by one author, either.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to them Margot. I wonder if he had time for anything else but writing.
DeleteFrench noir? Now there's an area of fiction I haven't explored. 173 adventures? Talk about being prolific!
ReplyDelete173 does constitute a rather long series!
DeleteCol – Thanks for posting this. Dard is new to me. And 300 books - he must have been taking the same vitamins as Georges Simenon.
ReplyDeleteElgin, I was reminded of Simenon also when I saw what his output was.
Delete173 in one series, 300 books in all - I honestly think I'm going to tiptoe away quietly, I can't get my head round that...
ReplyDeleteI don't think they are of War and Peace proportions thankfully! I'm happy to try a few!
DeleteI'm actually curious about this French author...-K.
ReplyDeleteI'm nearly halfway through the first one and enjoying it. He's like Garnier in that he's quite concise. BIAC weights in at 123 pages. I think you might like him.
DeleteAs an aside - 300 books, 173 in one series is quite bewildering to comprehend.
I have seen a lot of posts recently on his books. I look forward to your reviews.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed Bird in a Cage - should have something up on that soon.
Delete