And her backdrops (plural): she writes Murder In The Marais against (i) a EU trade treaty (fictitious) that will greatly restrict immigration if it gets through (ii) the vicious round up of Parisian Jews in by the SS, the holocaust + the ‘collabos’ (collaborators) who turned in Jews for cash, the black marketers, the recriminations that echo down the years since the war (iii) a love affair between a young SS /5(). This is author Cara Black's first novel and she got off to a rousing good start. It is November of in Paris when private detective Aimee Leduc is stopped by a rabbi who asks her to decipher a year old encrypted photograph and take the results to an older lady in the Marais (the old Jewish section of Paris)/5. · "No contemporary writer of noir mysteries evokes the spirit of Paris more than Cara Black in her atmospheric series starring P.I. Aimée Leduc The fearless, risk-taking Aimée is constantly running, hiding, fighting and risking her life—all while dressed in vintage Chanel and Dior and Louboutin heels." —USA TodayISBN
Cara Black is the author of sixteen book in the New York Times bestselling Aimée Leduc series, all of which are available from Soho bltadwin.ru lives in San Francisco with her husband and son and visits Paris frequently. Murder in the Marais is the first Aimee Leduc mystery by Cara Black. It's filled with the scares of modern day terrorism, the horrors of history, and the sights, smells and sounds of a Paris suburb, specifically of the Marais. There, Jewish families were once betrayed, children starved, and Nazis strode. Apparently other readers agree: Murder in the Marais just went into its second hardcover printing after an initial run of 5, Cara Black's life so far -- she's in her late 40s -- is an intriguing religious, cultural, and ethnic amalgam that might warrant a mystery novel in its own right.
Murder in the Marais. The initial installment of a projected series of mysteries set in Paris, this standout first novel introduces dauntless private investigator Aim e Leduc. In Cara Black's "accomplished, absorbing debut" (Kirkus Reviews), PI Aimée Leduc must decrypt a digitized photo from the s. But when Aimée visits the historic Jewish quarter of Paris to deliver the picture, she finds its intended recipient murdered#;and with a swastika carved in her aged fo. This is author Cara Black's first novel and she got off to a rousing good start. It is November of in Paris when private detective Aimee Leduc is stopped by a rabbi who asks her to decipher a year old encrypted photograph and take the results to an older lady in the Marais (the old Jewish section of Paris).
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