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A Very Profitable War

by Didier Daeninckx

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651408,722 (3.79)None
Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

"An entertaining thriller ... A Very Profitable War is also noteworthy because Daeninckx doesn't just think outside the box as far as this fairly well-worn genre goes, he shatters it."

. "The most controversial of contemporary French crime novelists.". "One hell of an unflinching look at war and its aftermath.". HTML:"How many detective stories have helped a country confront its past? Murder in Memoriam has certainly done that.". "Serves as a tap on the shoulder--a necessary reminder that what is dead is not buried, and what is buried is, unfortunately, not dead.". HTML:"Murder in Memoriam is the kind of book that begins to restore one's confidence in the detective story. Not only has Daeninckx produced a particularly intriguing narrative, but he has found a way to give this narrative a satisfying significance. . . A touch of moral vision and a pinch of righteous anger work wonders.". "A masterful weave of political history.". HTML:

A rollicking noir set in Paris, during the anarchic days following World War One

In January 1920, in the aftermath of "the war to end all wars," private detective René Griffon is hired to investigate the marital infidelities of the wife of a war hero.

But what he uncovers is more than shabby behavior, and more than a sex scandal--what he uncovers is a scandal with devastating national implications. And as Griffon's investigation plunges him into the murky world of blackmail, murder, anarchists, profiteering, and the repercussions of the war's dark secrets, he discovers that the people who helped France win the war are being made to pay for the peace.

Both homage to its American predecessors and critique of the Americanization of French--and global--culture, A Very Profitable War is a tense and evocative book that will linger long after its startling conclusion.… (more)

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Didier Daeninckx is a writer I first heard about in Rich’s review of Murder in Memoriam, the only other Daeninckx available in English, and the political element of his writing caught my eye. But besides politics, A Very Profitable War deals with the life of a private investigator: René Griffon, a World War I veteran who’d like to forget about the war completely is hired by Colonel Fantin, a war hero, to track his unfaithful wife in Paris in 1920. Of course Griffon uncovers much more than an unfaithful wife (blackmail, political exploitation, and more), and Griffon and Irène, his partner and girlfriend, are surprised by the dangers of the investigation.

I don’t read historical crime fiction much, but this book strikes me as exceptionally evocative of the industrial, residential, and political landscape of Paris after World War I. There is also, of course, lots of information about World War I since Griffon remembers his service and what he’d like to forget about, but it’s handled in an interesting way. It’s much less confusing than the war sections of Nesbø’s The Redbreast, for example. It does, however, slow down the action in the first third of the book.

Though Daeninckx has lots of sympathy for René and other war veterans, especially in a scene in a sanatorium, it strikes me that he doesn’t flesh out the rest of his characters. Irène, especially, is an idealized figure without much to do, and the villains are a bit flat. That being said, it’s an interesting and brief read with some surprises along the way despite the few things that bothered me, i.e. the female characters, Griffon’s obsession with his Packard automobile, and lots of descriptions of driving directions.

Other reviews appear in The Complete Review and Reviewing the Evidence.

Only two Daeninckx books have been translated into English, and the third, Nazis in the Metro, is scheduled for publication in February 2014.
  rkreish | Jul 29, 2013 |
no reviews | add a review

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Toute littérature dépend du ventre.
Les intestins sont la parodie du cerveau.

Denis Fernandez.
« Océanographie des vents. »
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En me souvenant
de Rémy et Ferdinand.
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CHAPITRE PREMIER

Tout avait commencé au début du mois de janvier. Il faisait un froid de canard et je marchais au grog du matin au soir.
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Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

"An entertaining thriller ... A Very Profitable War is also noteworthy because Daeninckx doesn't just think outside the box as far as this fairly well-worn genre goes, he shatters it."

. "The most controversial of contemporary French crime novelists.". "One hell of an unflinching look at war and its aftermath.". HTML:"How many detective stories have helped a country confront its past? Murder in Memoriam has certainly done that.". "Serves as a tap on the shoulder--a necessary reminder that what is dead is not buried, and what is buried is, unfortunately, not dead.". HTML:"Murder in Memoriam is the kind of book that begins to restore one's confidence in the detective story. Not only has Daeninckx produced a particularly intriguing narrative, but he has found a way to give this narrative a satisfying significance. . . A touch of moral vision and a pinch of righteous anger work wonders.". "A masterful weave of political history.". HTML:

A rollicking noir set in Paris, during the anarchic days following World War One

In January 1920, in the aftermath of "the war to end all wars," private detective René Griffon is hired to investigate the marital infidelities of the wife of a war hero.

But what he uncovers is more than shabby behavior, and more than a sex scandal--what he uncovers is a scandal with devastating national implications. And as Griffon's investigation plunges him into the murky world of blackmail, murder, anarchists, profiteering, and the repercussions of the war's dark secrets, he discovers that the people who helped France win the war are being made to pay for the peace.

Both homage to its American predecessors and critique of the Americanization of French--and global--culture, A Very Profitable War is a tense and evocative book that will linger long after its startling conclusion.

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