I actually read this
Maigret novel, not while in Corona lockdown, but its polar opposite,
on a flight from London to Miami, to cover the Super Bowl for the
BBC, visit my niece and her new baby, some friends in West Palm Beach
and generally enjoy the sunshine. It's easy to forget exactly how
perfect Simenon is for travel reading, compact tales that proceed
with deliberate energy and are written with an attention to detail in
a prose that makes such detail clear.
So clear, in fact,
that I was reminded of a time in the Eighties when I sat on a prize
jury for sports documentaries, the Golden Shot (yes, a gold-plated
shot-put ball was the trophy) in the Slovene resort town of Portoroz.
The winning documentary was a French film about a French sailboat
crossing the Atlantic. It was not my pick, partly because its best
feature seemed to be the arguments among the crew, even in mid-storm,
about what was to be served for dinner, how it should be cooked and
what wine to drink with it, which in retrospect was probably what sold it to my fellow (European) judges.
So too with Maigret.
The wine-merchant whose murder Maigret investigates is a tough,
self-made man and inveterate womanizer, the kind of man who generates
no lack of suspects. This was published in 1970, it is a time of
change in France, but part of Simenon's observations point out
clearly that many morés
remained unchanged. Not least meals. Indeed, although Maigret is
bothered by the flu throughout the story, his appetite barely wanes;
at one point, late at night and feeling sick, the prospect of Madame
Maigret's choucroute forces him to remind her 'and don't forget the
salt pork'. Similarly, even the toughest case can wait for veal
blanquette at the Brasserie Dauphine.
I
can't help but feel Simenon drawing a parallel between those two
French obsessions, food and love, but it's most interesting in the
area where the two intersect. Though not as interesting in the area
where the latter intersects with respectability. Maigret's discomfort
with the upper classes, apparent in the interviews he conducts, is
set against the characters from the rest of his world, drawn more
vividly with the feel of a Victor Hugo. The contrast between Madame
Chabot, in her house off Place Des Voges and in her chauffeur-driven
car, with Madame Pigou, wife of Chabot's accountant, in her messy
apartment in Monmartre, could not be clearer.
But
as ever, it is this sensitivity which makes Maigret stand out, and in
this case, it's his personal relation with the killer, his seeming
empathy, that makes the story so involving, and its resolution so
moving, despite its outwardly seeming matter of fact or
anti-climactic. Many of us prefer the understated Simenon, whose eye
for details draws us more deeply into the crime, and its solution.
Maigret and the Wine
Merchant by Georges Simenon
translated by Ros
Schwartz
Penguin Classics,
£7.99, ISBN 9780241304260
This review will also appear at Crime Time (www.crimetime.co.uk)
This review will also appear at Crime Time (www.crimetime.co.uk)
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