Perfect Crime Books
The Last Crimes of Charles Mistinguett
The Last Crimes of Charles Mistinguett
Couldn't load pickup availability
And from Booklist: "This slick thriller combines the noirish cool of French cinema (think Jean-Pierre Melville's Le Samourai) with an almost jaunty, witty charm (Cary Grant in To Catch a Thief and Charade). Stylishly written and cleverly plotted crime fiction."
Charles Mistinguett, the French-Algerian narrator of James L. Ross's newest novel, is a retired criminal living on the Cote d'Azur who wants nothing more than to be left alone to enjoy his ill-gotten gains. He would never claim to be innocent of all things, only of the charges laid against him by the French government: murder, extortion, terrorism--useful lies if agents of the state plan to execute a man without trial. James L. Ross's debut novel Long Pig was a 2012 Shamus nominee for best paperback original. And reviewing Death in Budapest, Publishers Weekly declared, "Fans of hard-edged spy novels will hope that this is but the first of many from Ross . . . twists straight out of John Le Carre [and] sardonic wit."
Share
