RANDOM JOTTINGS


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I was sent The Dying Minutes a week or two ago and noted that this was 'A Daniel Jacquot Novel' and is all about an ex-rugby playing French detective and set in Marseilles.   Gallic shrug from moi and Qui?  I opened it and started to read and immediately found myself gripped (or should that be grippe…).  I have not been to France for years and years and have never been to Marseilles, but after a few chapters of Martin O'Brien's book I had this overwhelming desire to catch a flight and fly there immediately.   My French is of the La Plume de ma tante et sur la table de Mon Oncle variety, I know how to order a cafe au lait, can say Merde with the best of them and that is it, but I had this vision of moi sitting at a table on the waterfront knocking back a cafe, a Calva, eating freshly grilled fish and Danielsmoking a Galois, none of which I would dream of doing in real life.  The book reeks of France and the sea and I simply loved it.

OK so wallowing in garlic and bouillabaise is all very well and wonderful, but is the plot and the story as good and oh yes it is Oui Oui Oui.  Tut alors, c'est magnificque et…..(that's enough French Elaine).

Two deaths occur.  One is that of Philo, a fisherman known among his friends and acquaintances as le Philosophe, not because he was particularly clever or wise, but because he always had a book in his hand (my kind of homme) and there were not many fishermean who lay back on their drying nets to read a book.   He leaves his executor to give his boat, Constance, to somebody who will love and appreciate her and thus it comes into the hands of our Hero, Daniel Jacquot recently recovering from being shot (an earlier book one presumes). 

Second death – that of a convicted felon, Pierre-Louis Lombard.   On his death bed he asks for his lawyer, Claude Dupont, to visit him and gives him a packet to take away.   This packet contains the key to a long term left luggage locker in the Gare Saint-Charles and he is given instructions to take out its contents and deal with what is there.

"The first things he saw was the gold. A dull yellow glimmer at the bottom of the case…one by one he lifted out half a dozen linen drawstring bags….wads of banknotes bound in paper collars and rubber bands….a walled stack of currency twenty centimetres high.   Then the black velvet pouches….diamonds, maybe thirty or forty stones, emeralds, green as wet moss and in the third pouch a spill of deep blue sapphires…"

Also in the bag are packets of documents and photos all of which are of prominent people in compromising situations.   Dupont decides to use these photos to bring about retribution and starts sending them out to selected recipients all of whom react in different ways (one is a priest with a penchant for choir boys who commits suicide when he opens his morning mail and see what is inside).

Starting this process unfortunately starts a chain of events which soon lose control and it is not long before Mr Dupont and Mrs Dupont receive some very unpleasant visitors…

In total contrast, we hear of a refuge for battered wives receiving a large donation, in cash and anonymously, which will help keep them going for years; a small shabby cinema also receives money, enough to refurbish and to keep going and other charities and good causes find themselves blessed with unexpected largesse.

So two deaths, two different legacies – how are they tied together?

The answer is: gold.  As we learn in a short prologue at the start of the book there was a gold heist, daring and well planned some thirty years before.  Most of the gold was recovered but one lorry load went missing and somebody is still determined to find out where it went.

A great read, packed full of wonderful characters, danger, romance, sex, greed, excitement and culminating in an action packed boat chase and shoot out which I can imagine would make a stunning finish if this was ever filmed.  Had me on the edge of my seat (several books have done that to me lately, it's getting a bit worn) and could not put down and was up till after midnight last night finishing it.

I love Daniel Jacquot, he sounds very sexy..'then she saw him, younger, slimmer than she remembered. Leaning against a pillar, hands in pockets, one foot crossed over the other. A deep tan against a white T-shirt, an old cream jacket, faded blue jeans and espadrilles……A big warm smile as he drew closer, the gleam of his teeth making his tan even deeper….she felt herself caught up in his embrace, his arms about her, hugging her to him, a strange salty smell, mixed with a soapy pine scent…'

See what I mean?

OK and the the food, OMG the food.  The descriptions just make you drool. Here is a sample:

"the broth was a creamy yellow, puddled with darker globs of oil, broken with thick flakes of fish, like icebergs, and the more treacherous blackened tips of mussels. He took the broth first, a spoonful of the liquor, blew on it and then tipped it into his mouth.  The ocean, that's what it tasted like. Fresh and hot and sweet, the flavour filling his cheeks"

and another:

"Protected from the breeze by the wheelhouse, they stayed on deck, setting up the trestle table for the foie gras and toast and Merseult….and when every last smear of the foie gras was gone, he served a dish of figs and peaches to sluice away the richness of the liver, followed by a platter of Picodon and Banon goats cheese, aged and hardened into ball sized discs but softened by a mellow red from the Bellet vine-yards down the coast'

I love the Donna Leon books set in Venice and the Montalbano books set in Sicily, because not only are they excellent, but the food descriptions are wonderful and add to the ambiance.   If you read a British detective story you are more likely to find them knocking back a fried egg sandwich in a Greasy Spoon or a packet of prawn cocktail crisps which is all rather dispiriting as well as playing havoc with their digestions.   Lacks a certain je ne sai quoi no?

Sorry lapsing into Franglais again.  Must stop.

Off now to find the rest of the Daniel Jacquot books now.   As usual I shal read them wildly out of order and not know what is going on but, merde, who cares?

Terrific book – loved it and my thanks to the lovely Najma from Random House who sent it to me 'cos she knows I like detective fiction.   More please…..

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13 responses to “The Dying Minutes – Martin O’Brien”

  1. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    Ooh Pau! Now there’s an idea – we had a holiday in Gascony years ago (actually before junior daughter was born!) and rather liked it despite experiencing the tail of a hurricane which caused a lot of damage in the south and southwest of France. FOrtunately it was only at about half power by the time it got to where we were staying but a mobile home in a pine forest makes a very noisy place to wait out that sort of storm and we didn’t get a lot of sleep!
    It’s very French France which is what she was saying she wanted to experience,so that’s another possible on the list!

  2. Elaine Avatar

    Yes Victoria, I rather thought grippe was something unpleasant but just thought it was a good play on words….
    or non as the case may be

  3. Elaine Avatar

    Oh I did not give away who was murdered Margaret – there were lots of dead bodies in this one! Yes did not open my tin of tomato soup after reading this, just had to start from scratch

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Oh very phwoar!
    My daughter was in France for a year when studying but she was at Pau and I visited her there and loved it. My visiting to France has been very limited and something I would like to correct sometime

  5. Victoria Corby Avatar

    I love this series of books, the only one I didn’t enjoy so much was one where the plot is based on events that happened during the war (can’t remember the title sorry) because there are an awful lot of mysteries set in France which hark back to the war and it gets a bit samey after a while.
    And I hope Elaine that you weren’t “grippé” by the book as that’d mean it gave you the flu!

  6. Margaret Powling Avatar
    Margaret Powling

    Oo,la,la! As I think they say. Well, old Raymond Blanc is fond of saying it … but this is one for me. I’m sorry to say I had to give up reading the review because when you came to who was found murdered, I didn’t want to know the plot. That you loved Jacquot was enough for me and any book which describes food so well that it makes us turn to the fridge to see what we can make which isn’t directly out of a tin and onto a slice of Hovice granary toasted is for me.
    A writer who similarly used to make me turn to the kitchen was Elizabeth Falconer. I loved her books, more her earlier ones than her later ones. I don’t know what’s happened to her, I think she wrote children’s as well as adult fiction, but I loved her first three or four books, mainly set in France with descrptions of food and markets and cooking and scents and, well, generally the joie de vivre (is that the right spelling?) of it all.

  7. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    Jacquot is rather phwoar isn’t he?
    I adored the first in the series and have number two in my library pile from where it will be removed tout de suite because after the week I have just had, I deserve a treat!
    Junior daughter is hoping to study French and Italian at university starting in the autumn and will spend the third year abroad so I might see if I can persuade her to try Marseille for the French section (she can’t decided between Siena, Venice or Sicily for the Italian bit – I will be happy to visit her wherever!)

  8. Elaine Avatar

    Jo – yes another lovely detective newly discovered. I adore detective fiction and really enjoyed this book. Glad you and your mum are liking my recocmmendations!

  9. Elaine Avatar

    I also fried up some chunks of ancient bacon and bunged them in as well. It turned out to be absolutely delicious. I just did not feel I could open a tin of Heinz tomato after reading all these wonderful descriptions of food.
    Loved this book – really exciting and well written

  10. Jo Avatar

    Another detective to get involved with. You have introduced me too many Elaine. But I am grateful and do s my mum who I pass all recommendations on to!

  11. Christine Harding Avatar

    Your bottom of the fridge soup sounds similar to my bottom of the veg basket soup, with celery instead of courgette! You make Martin O’Brien’s Daniel Jacquot novels sound very enticing, especially the descriptions of food – if they’re as good as Commissarion Brunetti and all that wonderful Italian food (Donna Leon is the only person who makes me feel as if want to eat meat) then I want to read them…

  12. Elaine Avatar

    It is a great read Pam and will now be seeking out the others.
    I just had lunch – made my Bottom of Fridge soup, using up what is lurking and today was leeks, spuds, carrots and a courgette. Absolutely delish and I fried up some bacon and dropped that in too. Not exactly up to the standard of some of the meals in this book, but good

  13. Pam - Travellin' Penguin Avatar

    Have to read this!!! The food descriptions made me hungry. Went to the kitchen and all I have at hand seems to be Weet Bix. How boring when you are talking foi gras! Bummer. Sounds like a fun read. Thanks for sharing it. Pam

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