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Carousel [Paperback]

J. Robert Janes (Author)
2.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 1, 2003
Paris, December 1942. The corpse of a naked girl has been found, strangled. Not far away, the body of a young man is discovered with his throat slashed, tied to the back of a carousel animal. A Wehrmacht corporal is killed. Scattered ancient Roman coins connect the three victims. Is it the Resistance? Or are sex and greed, the oldest of motivations, still rampant in a country groaning under the burden of Occupation?

J. Robert Janes's mysteries have been heralded as "an astonishing historical series" in The New York Times Book Review.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In a plot that escalates from tricky to ridiculous, Janes's two heroes keep themselves going with benzedrine, but readers are more likely to feel dizzy. In occupied Paris in late 1942, Surete Chief Inspector Jean-Louis St-Cyr and his Gestapo partner Capt. Hermann Kohler, paired before in Mirage, investigate the grisly murders of a carousel operator and, nearby, a young "artist's model." Then a German soldier is murdered in the same neighborhood, hostages are taken by the Nazis, leaving Louis and Hermann to race against time to solve the mystery and save the hostages. The French Resistance registers a mere whisper against the roaring machinations of the Gestapo, SS, Abwehr, rival French gangs, collaborators and profiteers. A cast that includes a Nazi necrophiliac, a sinning young priest, a crazed French veteran and assorted sleazeballs moves through some artful set pieces that lead to the final, hard-to-believe revelations with all suspects gathered at the carousel. Occasional patches of impressionistic writing and stream-of-consciousness ruminations don't make the cardboard characters any more convincing.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

This is a sequel to Mirage (Donald I. Fine, 1992). In Paris, 1942, two policemen must find the killer who left a dead girl naked and strangled, with a Roman coin on her forehead. France is occupied, and the French inspector is paired with a Gestapo agent. The discovery of two more bodies, those of a pimp and a German corporal, lifts the case from the merely criminal to the dangerously political. The situation is potentially interesting, but the language is so confusing and the local color so idiomatically rendered that the reader is hard put to follow the story. The combination of psychological wartime thriller and noir detective fiction is uneasy at best and ultimately unsuccessful. A marginal purchase.
- Edwin B. Burgess, U.S. Army TRALINET Ctr., Fort Monroe, Va.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Soho Crime; 1st U.S. pbk. ed edition (July 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1569471754
  • ISBN-13: 978-1569471753
  • Product Dimensions: 7.4 x 5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,559,856 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Carousel - a difficult but rewarding read., February 7, 2000
By 
Steve Angel (Middle of Nowhere, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carousel (Paperback)
I pride myself on being a relatively fast reader, so allow me to start by saying this book is very time-consuming. The book is a difficult read, but extremely worthwhile if you can persevere.

Janes writes very well, with richly-detailed descriptions of the characters and settings. At times this borders on excessive, and tends to distract one from the thrust of the story. This may or may not be a strength in a mystery. It depends on the intent of the author - to prevent the reader from prematurely deducing whodunit, or simply as a matter of overattention to detail. Janes' prose is written in a European style, reminiscent of 19th century classics. This can be awkward to the experienced reader, and downright alien to the literary novice. Again, this may or may not be a strength. With respect to the story itself, it is very complex in its evolution and excecution. I found it extremely captivating, particularly in later parts of the book, to see the strands of facts begin to coalesce into webs and sheets of truth. At times, a real page-turner, and at others a real headache. Janes successfully re-creates the atmosphere and aura of WW2 France under the Nazis. The undercurrents of fear, terror, and conquest are interwoven throughout the book, particularly in the interplay between St. Cyr and Kohler - conquered and conqueror.

All in all, these elements, while they may seem countercurrent to one another, come together to brilliantly tell a tale of murder and intrigue in Vichy France. The major detraction is, as I've said, the fact that this book demands one's undivided attention, and meticulous attention to everything that is written. Not for casual reading!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dizzying at times, May 20, 2006
By 
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Carousel (Paperback)
"Carousel" follows the pattern of Janes' other books featuring the partnership in occupied Paris of French police detective Louis St. Cyr and his Gestapo counterpart, Hermann Kohler. An unlikely buddy story, indeed.

A kinky murder drags the two cops into the murk of the wartime corruption and several other unsolved murders which may be related. A young woman is found raped and murdered in a hotel room she has rented under an assumed name, with several weird clues left behind. She's known to have been meeting an older man there. Family relationships going back decades are involved. As usual there are shadowy and sinister ties reaching to the top of the Nazi regime. At one point, Kohler and St. Cyr end up truffle-hunting in the countryside.

Janes' stylized writing creates the sense of fog surrounding Kohler and St. Cyr, but it also contributes to a certain amount of confusion. Their conversations with those who know something are often so elliptical as to leave the reader wondering what just actually transpired. Internal dialogue often emerges in fragmentary form without clear signals as to whom it belongs. It can be tough to follow, particularly as his plot is so complex. The web of German agencies competing to loot the city, with their personal and organizational rivalries, the shifting stew of French characters likewise at each other's throats, all make this book, like others in the series, dizzying to follow. The climactic scene, with most of the principals gathered in one place so that Everything Can Be Revealed, is a bit hokey that way.

Although his writing is heavy in atmosphere, I don't think Janes successfully evokes wartime Paris quite as well as another writer who strains at it less - Alan Furst. Several of his wartime espionage novels are located in Paris. Janes' books are weighed down by the murder mystery format, and by the somewhat overheated characterizations of St. Cyr and Kohler. He gives you as much wartime detail as Furst does, but somehow Furst's details seem both quirkier and more authentic. Janes tells us about ersatz coffee, and about women with drawn lines on their legs suggesting the seams of stockings that cannot be had amid the wartime scarcity, but somehow he never breaks through to the truly unique observations that would get the book fully into three dimensions. When St. Cyr notices a certain scent of perfume that seems to tie several characters together, I can't decide if this is a fine subtle touch or if Janes is playing the stereotypically-French card a little too strongly. I may be comparing apples and oranges here; this is a police-murder mystery, with its various conventions usually to be observed, while Furst's books are espionage but not really tied to the page-turning conventions of that or any other genre.

I don't want to bash "Carousel", though. For one thing, Janes does well developing the Kohler-St. Cyr relationship over the series. I've read three of the them, not in any chronological order, and this last one has me thinking I should start at the beginning and do them in order. In this particular one it's unclear why Kohler is so alienated from Nazidom in general, but rather than see this as a failing, it makes me want to read the other books to find out more.

Still, there are times in this book when I have no idea what just happened, why some conversation was important, who is talking or what is implied about the relationships of various characters to each other. In other words, I was sometimes lost, and had to just hang on and keep reading. At the end Janes brings it together - more or less. If you like the series, this is a respectable part of it.
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3.0 out of 5 stars More Like an Unsteady Mixer, August 15, 2011
By 
Grey Wolffe "Zeb Kantrowitz" (North Waltham, MA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
The biggest problem (of the many) with this book is the 'style' that the author used to make the book 'different'. We are constantly given the characters impressions as to what is going on and then have them make remarks so at times it hard to tell in what 'person' the book is written. At some parts, the book is written from the first person point of every character and we a left to figure out what is what and who said what to who.

As another reviewer commented, Janes uses the literal translation of french to english and you get people saying, "my old one" and "my fine". These may make sense in french because they have articles but in english they just become obscure.

The plot, appears to be intricately done, but since it get thicker and thicker, like adding bread crumbs to a mix that it's hard to tell what the point is that's being made. And, as the plot thickens so does the dialogue between Kohler and St-Cyr. Even at the end of the book, there's no clean wrap up and I'm still not sure as to who committed what crime. Tres disappointing, d'accord?


Zeb Kantrowitz
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