Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Three by Simenon (First Omnibus, 1970)

 Georges Simenon. First Omnibus. (1970)

The Neighbours (1967). Started reading this one, didn’t get past the first half dozen pages.

Maigret & the Nahour Case. (1967) Early Maigret. They get better as Simenon develops his terse, dialogue-heavy style. The Maigrets’ friend Dr Pardon calls late at night with a strange tale of treating a gunshot wound. Complications include a missing gun, people claiming false identities, dysfunctional families, and so on. A right mess. Reading it was fun while it lasted, but I had to skim a few paragraphs to remind myself what it was all about.

 Monsieur Monde Vanishes. (1952) Mr Monde, late 40s, prosperous, respected, owner of a successful business, married to a woman who values only his money, one morning walks out of his office leaving no word about his plans. He takes most of his bank account with him, but it’s stolen less than a day later in a seedy hotel. He finds a job, has an intermittent affair with a small-time actress, eventually makes his way back to his old life and wife, released from illusions about the necessity of respectability etc. Worth a reread.

Simenon fans may want to read all three novels. **½

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