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Maigret, Simenon, and France: social dimensions of the novels and stories PDF

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Maigret, Simenon and France This page intentionally left blank Maigret, Simenon and France Social Dimensions of the Novels and Stories BILL ALDER Foreword by Stephen Knight McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Jefferson, North Carolina, and London ISBN 978-0-7864-7054-9 (softcover : acid free paper ) LIBRARYOFCONGRESSCATALOGUINGDATAAREAVAILABLE British Library cataloguing data are available © 2013 Bill Alder. All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Front cover images © 2012 Shutterstock Manufactured in the United States of America McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Box 611, Jefferson, North Carolina 28640 www.mcfarlandpub.com To the memory of my father, BERT ALDER Acknowledgments I would like to thank Professor Stephen Knight of the Uni- versity of Melbourne and Doctor Heather Worthington of Cardiff University for their support and enthusiasm for this project. I have learned a great deal from them both. I have also benefited greatly from the comments of Doctor Maurizio Ascari of Bologna University and Professor Claire Gorrara of Cardiff University. I would like to thank Doctor Laurent Demoulin, curator of the Fonds Simenon at the University of Liège, for his hospitality and help during my visits. Tony and Sybil Clegg showed great kind- ness and generosity in their donation of their collection of Maigret texts. vi Table of Contents Acknowledgments vi Foreword by Stephen Knight 1 Preface 5 Introduction 9 CHAPTER 1 The Fayard Maigret Novels: Narratives, Contexts, Settings and Themes, 1931 21 CHAPTER 2 The Fayard Maigret Novels: Narratives, Contexts, Settings and Themes, 1932 53 CHAPTER 3 The Fayard Maigret Novels: Simenon’s Perspective 91 CHAPTER 4 Short Stories and Journalism: Maigret, Simenon and the Crises of the 1930s 114 CHAPTER 5 What Maigret Did Next 145 CHAPTER 6 Conclusions 173 Bibliography 197 Index 205 vii This page intentionally left blank Foreword by Stephen Knight Georges Simenon is one of the great forces of the crime fiction world. Not only did he create for Maigret 75 novels and 28 short stories, he produced well over a hundred other crime stories, notably the psychothrillers the French call romans durs, “hard novels.” He was enormously successful in translation as well: only Edgar Wallace and Agatha Christie have matched his world dominion. Like theirs, his style seems simple, his stories unelaborated. If this sug- gests that triumph in crime fiction depends on naivety, one contradiction is the ability of critics to see much in Simenon’s fiction, and another, wholly Gallic, one is the range of French star filmmakers who have found inspiration in his work—Renoir, Clouzot, Carné, Autant- Lara, Melville, Tavernier, Chab - rol, and Delannoy (starring Jean Gabin, no less). More depth lies in the life of Simenon. Born half Belgian- French, half Flemish (one of the more difficult citizenships of Europe), he was at school with World War I brutally close. He grew up through the financially dramatic 1920s and, especially in France, the politically melodramatic 1930s; he then lived in rural France through World War II. We do not know what Simenon thought when the local Nazis, perhaps not the best informed, felt Simenon was the same as the Jewish surname Simon. What we do know is that none of these drastic contexts make any overt mark on Simenon’s work. Bill Alder has written the first study to look closely at Simenon’s France as well as his fiction. He focuses on the intimately local currents of history and society, the fears, arrogances, deceptions and ultimately the crimes that people feel they are backed into by a changing, frightening, local world. Simenon started very young as a news reporter, and always had the power to write quickly: he could finish a book in a week. As he moved towards Maigret he published the hundred and fifty pulp novels in the period 1924– 1

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