From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. A compelling and sympathetic narrator instantly draws the reader into Bayard's stellar third historical. In 1818, the notorious Vidocq, a master detective who's rumored to work on both sides of the law, pulls 26-year-old Parisian doctor Hector Carpentier into a torture-murder inquiry. The victim, Chrétien Leblanc, died without revealing that he was on his way to visit Carpentier, news that comes as a complete shock to the doctor, as the dead man was a stranger to him. Vidocq soon discovers that Leblanc was actually in search of Carpentier's late father, who bore the same name. The elder Carpentier cared for Louis-Charles, Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette's young son, who died in prison in 1795. Bayard keeps the reader guessing until the end, though the puzzle aspect is less prominent than in his previous novel,
The Pale Blue Eye, which featured Edgar Allan Poe as sleuth. Few writers today can match the author's skill in devising an intelligent thriller with heart.
(Sept.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Bookmarks Magazine
Bayard draws his inspiration from history, and in this tight historical thriller, he revisits the tumultuous period following France’s Reign of Terror and Restoration. Vidocq, the first director of France’s Sûreté Nationale, is such a compelling real-life figure that not only does he make for a first-rate character study in
The Black Tower—but he also served as the inspiration for Victor Hugo’s Jean Valjean and Inspector Javert in
Les Misérables. If Vidocq—by turns scary and larger-than-life—steals the show, other characters, including the sympathetic Carpentier, are no less compelling. The suspenseful plot, a jigsaw of history and identity; ornate, period-driven prose; and a sharp eye for setting and cultural mores elevate
The Black Tower into a memorable novel.
Copyright 2008 Bookmarks Publishing LLC
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