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Thud! from Terry Pratchett
KoomValley? That was where the trolls ambushed the dwarfs, or the dwarfs ambushed the trolls. It was far away. It was a long time ago.

But if he doesn’t solve the murder of just one dwarf, Commander Sam Vimes of Ankh-Morpork City Watch is going to see it fought again, right outside his office.
With his beloved Watch crumbling around him and war-drums sounding, he must unravel every clue, outwit every assassin and brave any darkness to find the solution.And darkness is following him....

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From the Inside Flap of the Audio Cassette edition



Title: This Night's Foul Work
Author: Fred Vargas
ISBN: 1846551862
EAN: 9781846551864
416 Pages
Publisher: Harvill Secker
Binding: Hardcover
Publication date: 2008-02-07


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`this is fascinating and infuriating in equal measure'
`a splendid translation by Sian Reynolds...excellent!'
'Vargas's latest continues on the humorous and original eccentricity of her work',
`If you haven't cottoned on to Vargas's brilliant Adamsberg detective stories, you're missing a treat'.
`stylish prose and strong characters'
`The fascination of Fred Vargas's books is due as much to her characters as her plots... sit back and enjoy'.
'Her [writing has] been enthralling readers for over a decade'
`The book progresses at a leisurely pace but it holds the interest'
On the outskirts of Paris, two men have been found with their throats cut. It is assumed that this is a drug-related incident of the kind so often uncovered in that area of town. But Adamsberg is convinced that there is more to it. Anxious to keep control of the case, he must call in a favour from the pathologist Ariane Lagarde, someone he had come up against twenty-three years previously. The trail also leads Adamsberg to a cemetery, where a grave has been disturbed with no apparent motive. Could this be the work of the elderly nurse - a serial killer caught by Adamsberg two years ago and recently escaped from prison? Meanwhile a new lieutenant has been assigned to the team. There is something disquieting about him, not least when it emerges that he is from a neighbouring village in the Pyrenees, known for its feuds with Adamsberg's own childhood home. "This Night's Foul Work" is another riveting case for that most engaging of contemporary detectives, Jean-Baptiste Adamsberg, and another triumph from the redoubtable Fred Vargas.

2008-03-10 Fred Vargas - This Night's Foul Work

When Commissaire Adamsberg moves into his new house he is promptly informed by a neighbour that it is haunted by the ghost of the Silent Sister, a homicidal nun slain by a vengeful son. Adamsberg, being Adamsberg, accepts the news with nary a shiver. He has other matters on his mind. Two men have killed on the outskirts of Paris, their throats cut. The drug squad are trying to wrest the cases from him, but Adamsberg is determined to keep hold of them, adamant that the killings are not about drugs, his seeming only reason the mysterious soil found under the fingernails of both victims. And, of course, his intuition. On top of this, Adamsberg has to work with a new female pathologist with whom he had a run-in years previously, and with a new recruit to the squad, the mysterious Veyrenc, who has a tendency to speak in impromptu verse (from which the novel's title springs), and has a dark link with Adamsberg's own past also.

Then, Adamsberg has cause to visit a remote village in nearby Normandy, and hears the news that a stag has been found in local woodland, slain seemingly for no reason, certainly for no hunting trophy, with its heart torn out and left beside the body. It is only when Adamsberg hears about the death of a second stag that he has the flash of inspiration that jolts the puzzling investigation into action.

Of all European crime-writers, Fred Vargas is my favourite. Others may be brilliant, but Vargas is utterly unique, and that is the reason I hold her in such esteem. Nobody translated into English writes crime novels the way she does, with the humour, the quirkiness, the complete disregard for rationality (even though things often do turn out in a mostly rational manner). She is unique, and it is that uniqueness that's won her the Duncan Lawrie International Dagger two year's running. I wouldn't expect her to win it again for the third year, but I confess I would be surprised if This Night's Foul Work doesn't make the shortlist again, holding as it does all the qualities of her previous novels.

This Night's Foul Work is, I believe, the 7th and most recent Adamsberg novel, yet the fourth in English. Hopefully they will get around to translating some of the earlier ones so readers can get the full arc of Adamsberg's fictional life. I would love to know the full picture about his tricky relationship with beloved Camille, for example. However, it is fortunate that one doesn't need to read the series in order to be drawn into such an appealing, eccentric character. Adamsberg is the fulcrum of this series, and he and the way Vargas writes make an almost perfect match: eclectic, eccentric, a little flippant, sometimes seeming to make no sense whatsoever, wilfully encouraging the impossible as a result of intuition. They both appeal to the part of the brain that wants to embrace the seemingly inexplicable, the things which rationally cannot be, and yet *are*. If there's one thing that sums it all up it's the sheer twisted imagination of it: the everyday supplanted into a bizarre situation (the tree in The Three Evangelists, for example). The usual transposed on the unexplainable, normal events made bizarre by little imaginative details.

The novels are so absolutely refreshing. They are light yet entirely serious, full of alcoholic office cats and at the same time as full of instinctive understanding of how human beings work, both in groups and alone (Adamsberg's trip to a village in Normandy, and his encounters with the locals who gradually accept and even embrace him, are among the best scenes in the entire book). There is no other writer like her, and nor, I think, another writer who could pull of the books in the way she does. The writing is witty and full of humour and so very sprightly. The pages fly by in a sheer feast of intelligent entertainment. The protagonist is brilliant, as is his supporting cast. All I can do is to exhort people to read her without further ado. A Fred Vargas experience is one quite unlike any other.




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