Death of a Chef
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- 2,49 €
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- 2,49 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
"Devotees of G.M. Malliet and Charles Todd will enjoy this different and delicious series." --Booklist
Commissaire Capucine Le Tellier and her husband, a renowned restaurant critic, are frequent and privileged guests of Paris's cultured society. Unfortunately, a more refined milieu doesn't keep unsavory behavior like murder off the menu. . .
When the body of acclaimed Chef Jean-Louis Brault and a shotgun are discovered in an antique Louis Vuitton portemanteau, the general consensus is suicide. Brault had been understandably distraught, if not quite unhinged, amidst rumors that his restaurant La Mère Denis might lose its rare third Michelin star. But when Capucine investigates the scene of the crime, she doesn't think it's only the boulliabaisse that smells fishy. And when Le Monde suggests that Capucine's investigation is a cover up for the lethal consequences of food critics everywhere--a profession in which her husband takes great pride--she will stop at nothing to solve the case.
Praise for Alexander Campion and the Capucine Culinary Mysteries
"Riveting gastronomic mystery. . . Readers will want a second helping." --Publishers Weekly on The Grave Gourmet
"Steeped in Parisian culture and class structure. . .this mystery makes for a fine getaway read." --Library Journal on Killer Critique
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
At the start of Campion's delicious third mystery featuring Commissaire Capucine Le Tellier (after 2012's Killer Critique), a newly purchased Louis Vuitton antique trunk delivered to the Paris apartment of Capucine's best friend, C cile, turns out to contain the naked body of a dead man. A signet ring on the corpse's finger identifies the victim as three-star chef Jean-Louis Brault, whose only enemy is Le Figaro's vituperative food critic, Lucien Folon, who claims Michelin will be taking away one of Brault's stars in their next edition. A shotgun between Brault's legs suggests he could have killed himself. The subsequent death (apparently accidental) of Firmin Roque, a former communist with a connection to the Faience pottery factory in which Brault had an interest, raises the stakes, as Capucine and her two assistants travel about the country in search of answers. Needless to say, they eat and drink well as the case draws to a satisfying conclusion.