Murder in the Bastille (Aimee Leduc Series #4) by Cara Black

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: March 2003
  • 304pp
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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2003
    • Publisher: Soho Press, Incorporated
    • Format: Paperback, 304pp

    Synopsis

    "Cara Black books are good companions, and Murder in the Bastille especially so. Fine characters, good suspense, but, best of all, they are transcendentally, seductively, irresistibly French. If you can’t go, these will do fine. Or, better, go and bring them with you."—Alan Furst

    "Charming. . . . Aimée is one of those blithe spirits who can walk you through the city’s historical streets and byways with their eyes closed."—Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review

    "Paris is one of my favorite cities in all the world; Black’s books are a fine way to revisit it."—New Orleans Times-Picayune

    "Black’s fourth is her best yet, with complex, appealing characters, a crisp, well-paced mystery, and a setting like no other."—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

    Aimée Leduc is all dressed up in her new Chinese silk jacket, supposedly an "exclusive," for dinner with a difficult client at an elegant restaurant in the Bastille district. She is chagrined to see that the woman seated at the very next table is wearing an identical jacket. When the woman leaves her cell phone on the table, Aimée follows her to return it and is attacked in the shadowy Passage Boule Blanche. When she regains consciousness, Aimée finds that she is blind. Nevertheless, she is told she is lucky; the woman she was following was found in the next passage, murdered.

    Aimée is determined to identify her attacker. Was he actually a serial killer targeting showy blondes as the police insist? Was he really after the other woman? Or wasAimée his intended victim?

    Cara Black lives in San Francisco with her husband, a bookseller, and her son. She is the author of Murder in Belleville and Murder in the Marais, published by Soho Press. Murder in the Sentier was a San Francisco Chronicle bestseller and has been nominated for an Anthony Award for Best Novel. For more information, visit www.carablack.com

    The New York Times

    It takes a true act of faith to accept the blinded heroine's facility at tracking a serial killer known as the Beast of Bastille while running a computer investigation on a dodgy client. But it's autumn in Paris, and Aimee is one of those blithe spirits who can walk you through the city's historic streets and secret byways with their eyes closed. — Marilyn Stasio

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    Biography

    Cara Black is the author of nine books in the Aimee Leduc series. She frequently visits Paris but lives in San Francisco with her husband and son.

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    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

    Enjoyable Readby Anonymous

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    July 30, 2008: This was my first time reading a book by Cara Black and I was very happy with my choice. The book is an easy read. It moves at a quick pace, and while it contained a few small tangents, the majority of the book remained focused on the mystery at hand. Black's descriptions of Paris were enjoyable and helped me get a feel for the location of the story. She introduced a variety of characters who were unique and added depth to the mystery. Overall, this is a well written book, and I would recommend it to anyone looking for an enjoyable, easy read murder mystery.

    delightful Leduc mysteryby harstan

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    February 02, 2003: In 1994 Paris, private investigator Aimee Leduc meets with client Vincent Csarda to try to convince him to hand over his hard drive to the Judiciare who are investigating a gunrunning firm that had dealings with his company. Vincent refuses and walks out of the restaurant. Aimee notices a cell phone left by another patron. She picks it up to return it when a call comes through. She answers the phone, but before she can say anything, a man pleads with the owner to meet him at a nearby alley. Being a Good Samaritan, Aimee goes there to give the man the phone only to be assaulted. She ends up in a hospital blind. The police believe that the serial killing Beast of Bastille tried to murder Aimee, but she knows better especially with a victim in the next alley who happened to own the cell phone. Unable to see, Aimee relies on her computer genius partner, four-foot Rene Friant as her eyes. The pair work together on the two cases. Desperately trying to persuade Vincent to cooperate hits one stone wall after another. Seeking her assailant is dangerous whether she waits for the man to finish the job or goes after him. The key to the delightful Leduc mysteries is Paris as the added slight touches of French culture makes the tour feel more authentic leading the non-French audience to believe they need a passport. On top of the city lights (and dark spots) readers obtain a strong who-done-it while Aimee adapts to the loss of sight. Though much of the villainy seems old chapeau, Aimee and her partner make for a wonderful investigative tale. Harriet Klausner