An audio book, set in St Louis, Alsace.
Manfred (36) frequents a restaurant run by Pasteur and Marie where Adele (19) works. One night he sees her meeting a boy with a scooter. She disappears. Gorsky, a policeman, questions him. Manfred doesn't mention seeing Adele, not wanting to seem to be a voyeur.
Manfred goes to Strasburg sometimes, to a bar where he could pick up call-girls. He meets Alice in the building where they live. After their first date she invites him to have a night-cap. He doesn't take advantage.
Gorsky likes studying people, especially when they lie. He's married to Celine, with a daughter. Celine would like to move to a big city.
When a boy (reading Zola and the Existentialists), Manfred had met a girl, Juliette, in a yellow dress. They were immediately in love. He was brought up by grandparents. Her father was a lawyer. They met daily in a wood. On their last day, he tried touching her. He wasn't sure what to do. During sex he'd somehow straggled her. Gorsky had investigated. A vagrant had been sentenced, based on little evidence. The prosecution had done Gorsky's career no harm. We learn that Gorsky's father had a pawn shop. Sometimes he was a fence. He expected Gorsky to take over the shop. We learn how Gorsky met Celine.
Gorsky invites Manfred to correct his evidence. Gorsky tells Manfred that he gave Adele the creeps. After, Manfred tries to act normal. He thinks he's being watched. He thinks Alice might be spying on him.
Gorsky interviews the boy on the bike. He admitted to having cannibis. He said Adele was experienced. Gorsky realises that Manfred when a boy lived close to the woods. He tells Manfred he wants to interview him. Manfred flees to Strasburg, kills himself. Adele returns.
In a final chapter the translator writes that the novel was published in 1982. It didn't sell well until Chabrol made a film of it in 1988. The novel made the author unpopular in his home town of St Louis. He thought the film adaption made the hero look too much like him. At 38 he killed himself.
Other reviews
- motherbookerblog (As a reader, you have to work just as hard as Gorski to work out if Manfred is guilty or not.)
- Arnold Taylor (The way in which the author explores the minds of these two characters, particularly Bauman, is fascinating. He is never afraid to take the time to do this and never for one moment do we feel a need for more 'action'. However, when the action does come it is a complete surprise and we are left to contemplate the sadness of a life that never really got going, that was spent aimlessly and – except for one brief period – almost completely alone. This is a crime novel but it is so much more than that, and whilst it owes a lot to Simenon, it is in no way diminished by that comparison.)