Miami Herald (Sunday)

Murder at the Porte de Versailles Dreaming of France? Two new mystery novels are for you

- BY MICHAEL SIMS Special To The Washington Post

Bruno’s Challenge: And Other Stories of the French Countrysid­e

By Martin Walker; Knopf, 256 pages, $27

France has captured the imaginatio­n of wildly varied English-speaking writers, from Edith Wharton to James Baldwin and beyond. Martin Walker and Cara Black — born in Scotland and the United States, respective­ly — display their affection for French culture through mystery series that draw us in not just for the cheese and wine but also for the forensics and Christie-style puzzles.

Walker’s popular detective Bruno (Benoît Courrèges) was born in the Perigord and, after serving in the military, returned to try policing; he is now chief for the entire Vézère Valley. Black’s private detective and security consultant Aimée Leduc is a native Parisienne, daughter of a disgraced policeman.

Both authors feel the drumbeat of France’s past, from colonialis­m to Vichy to Jacques Chirac. Leduc scooters around a city synonymous with romance and intrigue. Bruno drives his battered Jeep through one of the most historyric­h regions on Earth, where cave walls portray the aurochs and woolly mammoth.

Cara Black has studied Buddhism in India, taught English in Japan, and visits Paris at least twice a year with notebook in hand, to explore and to interview les flics about crime and procedure. The 20th Aimée Leduc novel, “Murder at the Porte de Versailles,” is taut, vivid, smart, rich in humanity and addictive momentum. It is set in 2001, only a couple of months after 9/11, and police and internatio­nal authoritie­s are on high alert. A dear friend of Aimée’s is found unconsciou­s in an explosion’s rubble, with evidence indicating that he may have set the bomb. Black races ahead, in alternatin­g scenes with Leduc and crooked cops and everyday people caught beyond their depth.

Martin Walker came late to fiction, after a long and successful career as a journalist — a quartercen­tury in Moscow as Russian bureau chief for the Guardian, editor in chief at UPI, a senior fellow at the World Policy Institute, author of books on topics such as the Cold War and the Clinton presidency. After he and his wife bought a house in France, Walker was inspired by a compassion­ate and reliable real-life local policeman to create Bruno. Both he and Cara Black conjure an internatio­nal background — corporate greed, terrorism, environmen­tal threats — as vividly as they sketch a vineyard or an alley.

The strangest thing about Walker’s series is how often Bruno starts out like Sheriff Andy Taylor of Mayberry and winds up like James Bond — with a dash of Anthony Bourdain. The running descriptio­n on each Bruno novel is about landscape, not characters: “A Mystery of the French Countrysid­e.” Walker has altered the subtitle for this collection to “And Other Stories of the French Countrysid­e,” because these are not detective stories, although they are about a popular detective.

There is even a question about whether these charming vignettes are stories in the usual sense. In these outings, we accompany a cop as he performs profession­al and personal tasks that fall between the big cases. Some first appeared in Bruno cookbooks. Not much of a criminal nature occurs. In one story, helmeted and thus anonymous bikers vandalize a resident Senegalese’s coffee stall in the town market, apparently as racist intimidati­on. The story follows market politics, not the criminals, although eventually there is some resolution.

Like all of Walker’s writing, however, these glimpses are rich in atmosphere and an almost visceral perception of the sympathy and compromise that bond a group of neighbors into a community. Page after page, Walker writes some of the best prose in the genre, attending to both human relationsh­ips and the texture of everyday life with a sensuous appreciati­on. Whether preparing nettle soup, liaising with the Police Nationale or reading boar scat, Bruno remains focused and efficient. As rooted in the Perigord soil as a grapevine, Bruno reminds me — in his rich emotional life, his love of community and food — of Joseph Hansen’s insurance investigat­or in 1980s Los Angeles, Dave Brandstett­er.

If you are new to Walker’s series, don’t start with “Bruno’s Challenge.” It doesn’t show off his plotting skills or his sly way of turning the screws in the last half of a novel. Do yourself the favor of beginning with “Bruno,

Chief of Police” (2009). You don’t have to read the novels in order of publicatio­n, but doing so will let you witness how character relationsh­ips grow and change in realistic, unpredicta­ble ways. However, if you already know and love Bruno and St. Denis, turn immediatel­y to

By Cara Black; Soho Crime, 360 pages, $27.95

Martin Walker’s new platter of delicious morsels.

 ?? SOHO CRIME Handout ?? “Murder at the Porte de Versailles” and “Bruno’s Challenge”
SOHO CRIME Handout “Murder at the Porte de Versailles” and “Bruno’s Challenge”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States