Kamis, 06 Februari 2014

? Ebook Download Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker

Ebook Download Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker

While the other people in the shop, they are uncertain to locate this Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker directly. It may need more times to go shop by store. This is why we intend you this site. We will provide the best method and recommendation to get the book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker Even this is soft documents book, it will be ease to bring Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker any place or save in your home. The distinction is that you might not need move the book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker location to location. You could require just duplicate to the various other gadgets.

Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker

Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker



Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker

Ebook Download Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker

Pointer in selecting the best book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker to read this day can be obtained by reading this web page. You could locate the best book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker that is offered in this world. Not only had actually the books released from this nation, yet also the various other countries. As well as currently, we intend you to review Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker as one of the reading products. This is just one of the best publications to accumulate in this site. Consider the resource as well as browse the books Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker You could discover great deals of titles of the books provided.

This Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker is quite appropriate for you as beginner user. The users will certainly constantly start their reading practice with the favourite theme. They might not consider the author as well as author that create guide. This is why, this book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker is really best to read. Nonetheless, the principle that is given up this book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker will certainly show you lots of points. You could begin to like likewise reading till completion of guide Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker.

On top of that, we will certainly share you the book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker in soft data forms. It will not disrupt you making heavy of you bag. You need just computer tool or gadget. The web link that we provide in this site is available to click and after that download this Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker You know, having soft file of a book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker to be in your gadget can make ease the visitors. So through this, be an excellent viewers now!

Just link to the net to gain this book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker This is why we indicate you to make use of and utilize the established innovation. Reading book does not suggest to bring the published Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker Developed modern technology has allowed you to review only the soft file of guide Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker It is very same. You might not have to go and get traditionally in looking the book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker You may not have enough time to spend, may you? This is why we provide you the very best means to get the book Bruno, Chief Of Police: A Novel Of The French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), By Martin Walker currently!

Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker

Meet Benoît Courrèges, aka Bruno, a policeman in a small village in the South of France.  He’s a former soldier who has embraced the pleasures and slow rhythms of country life. He has a gun but never wears it; he has the power to arrest but never uses it.  But then the murder of an elderly North African who fought in the French army changes all that.  Now Bruno must balance his beloved routines—living in his restored shepherd’s cottage, shopping at the local market, drinking wine, strolling the countryside—with a politically delicate investigation.  He’s paired with a young policewoman from Paris and the two suspect anti-immigrant militants.  As they learn more about the dead man’s past, Bruno’s suspicions turn toward a more complex motive.

This edition includes an excerpt from Martin Walker's The Devil's Cave.

Bonus material! Martin Walker is often asked by his readers for vacation recommendations in the area where his best-selling series is set. In "A Perfect Weekend in Perigord," Walker shares his itinerary for an ideal vacation in this picturesque region.

  • Sales Rank: #13027 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2009-03-24
  • Released on: 2009-03-24
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From Publishers Weekly
Policing in Chief Bruno Courrèges's sun-dappled patch of Périgord involves protecting local fromages from E.U. hygiene inspectors, orchestrating village parades and enjoying the obligatory leisurely lunch—that is, until the brutal murder of an elderly Algerian immigrant instantly jolts Walker's second novel (after The Caves of Périgord) from provincial cozy to timely whodunit. As a high-powered team of investigators, including a criminally attractive female inspector, invade sleepy St. Denis to forestall any anti-Arab violence, the amiable Bruno must begin regarding his neighbors—or should we say potential suspects—in a rather different light. Without sacrificing a soupçon of the novel's smalltown charm or its characters' endearing quirkiness, Walker deftly drives his plot toward a dark place where old sins breed fresh heartbreak. Walker, a foreign affairs journalist, is also the author of such nonfiction titles as The Iraq War and America Reborn. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
“A nice literary pairing with the slow-food movement . . . [It is] lovely . . . to linger at the table.” —Entertainment Weekly

“Enjoyable. . . . Martin Walker plots with the same finesse with which Bruno can whip up a truffle omelette, and both have a clear appreciation for a life tied to the land.” —The Christian Science Monitor

“[A] wonderfully crafted novel as satisfying as a French pastry but with none of the guilt or calories.” —Tucson Citizen’s Journal
 
“Bruno is a delightful character and Walker’s handling of long-held grudges is intelligent and sympathetic.” —The Guardian (London)

“A roman policier . . . that the celebrated Simenon, creator of Inspector Jules Maigret, would have been proud to claim . . . Readers [will] effortlessly enter French consciousness through [this] perspicacious book.” —Baton Rouge Advocate
 
“Highly satisfying.” —The Boston Globe
 
“Absolutely amazing.” —The Knowledgeable Blogger
 
“Such a pleasure to read that I can’t help but suspect that Walker had equal fun writing it.” —BookBrowse
 
“Charming and many pages of the book will have readers purring with delight. There is, however, a darker side. . . . The crime which disturbs the idyllic commune of St Denis has its origins in France’s troubled past and provokes outbreaks of the politically inspired violence that simmers beneath the placid and agreeable surface presented to tourists.” —The Scotsman (UK)
 
“Distinctive well-rounded characters and an intriguing mystery are a winning combination in Martin Walker’s Bruno, Chief of Police. . . . Walker’s relaxed style and good humour help to bri...

About the Author
Martin Walker is the senior director of the Global Business Policy Council and editor emeritus and international affairs columnist at United Press International. Formerly Moscow and U.S. bureau chief for Britain’s The Guardian, he is also a senior scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. His books include The Cold War: A History, a New York Times Notable Book and short-listed for the Whitbread Book of the Year Prize, and The Caves of Périgord, a novel. He has written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, and The Times Literary Supplement. He lives in Washington, D.C., and the southwest of France.

Most helpful customer reviews

60 of 62 people found the following review helpful.
Mild mystery but mostly a love song to the Perigord
By A. Anderson
In the village of St. Denis, life is very good. And the man with the best of lives is Brunoit (known as Bruno), the young and attractive Chief of Police, who leads the citizens of his village with empathy and sensitivity and is generally beloved. And that, largely, is what the book is about. There is no grit in this mystery and very little mystery: there are no bad guys but only the eddies that arise from the past. Even the death of a nearly invisible member of the community has only momentary impact with a barely jarring note. This is a love song to the small town life of rural France, where friends and neighbors are kind and helpful and generous, where the routine of daily life is soothing and reassuring and where, if you are an expatriate American (as the writer seems to be), everything is good in retreating from the bustle and where the demands of the modern world are muted. It is lovingly written, and while attractive, has little beyond the appeal of an airbrushed postcard. Readers of the Donna Leon series set n Venice with the more believable police chief, Brunetti, may like Bruno and the travel to this lovely village. Those who want a tangible mystery or a bit of depth in characters will feel as though they ate a profiterole...tasty but unmemorable.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Better than Truffles
By The Just-About-Average Ms. M
I'm positively distraught that this book, and the ones following it, have been around all this time and I didn't know it. So here I am, making up for lost time.

If your style is a hell-for-leather, no holds barred, fast-and-furious mystery full of thrills, clues, multiple dead bodies, and action on every page, this is not your book. At all. Go read the pulp fiction writers.

What we have here instead is a lovely, lyrical, and eminently enjoyable immersion into the life of a small fictional village in the real Dordogne in south-central France, a region famous for wine and amazing country cuisine. We meet the villagers, fully fleshed, three-dimensional folks with traits we can recognize and identify with at the same time we see, with just the right degree of clarity, the history, quirks, and beliefs that join them, and keep them apart. We participate in a couple of the annual village fetes, sample the fresh produce, cheeses, and other wares at the village market days while sabotaging the efforts of the Brussels bureaucrats to enforce "cleanliness and food hygiene." We watch Benoît Courrèges, St. Denis’s chief of police who insists on being called Bruno, putter about his little farm, feed his chickens, play with his Bassett Hound Gigi, a for real hunting dog, and whip up simple meals involving olive oil, butter, mushrooms, potatoes, and steak. Bruno cooks quite a bit, actually, and so do his friends, whose dishes, lovingly described, meant I had to take several food breaks while I was reading. And wine breaks... yes.

In the midst of this lovely slice of French village life there is a murder. Bruno will solve it, naturally, because it is his job to do so. He manages rather well, despite a beautiful female inspector on the fast track, a supercilious jerk from Paris full of himself, and more undercurrents from the days of the Resistance than one would imagine. All is not what it seems, though much of the superficial facts surrounding the murder are eerily appropriate to today’s unfortunate climate. Bruno is as dogged after facts in old-fashioned ways as Gigi is after small furry animals, and it pays off, naturally. But not in the way you might imagine. Oh, no. And the resolution is utterly human—and humane—at the same time as it is not “by the book.”

I loved this book because of its absolutely accurate and emotionally connected portrayal of French village life and the variety of people living in the village. I’ve spent time in the Dordogne, although as Bruno says, it is overfull of English and Dutch expats buying up ruins and restoring them with a vengeance, thus driving real estate costs through the barrel-tiled roof. I’ve spent much more time in small villages and communes further south, which are no different from the fictional St. Denis. The author knows what he’s writing about, on all levels. And after way too many books set in France by writers who don’t know France from Slovenia, this was better than truffles.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Bruno, Chief of Police by Martin Walker: A review
By PlantBirdWoman
Benoit Courreges, known to everyone as Bruno, is the chief of police in the small village of St. Denis in the Dordogne region of southwestern France. He's a unique kind of policeman. He has a gun but he keeps it locked away. He makes every possible effort not to arrest people, preferring reasoning with them and sometimes turning a blind eye to minor infringements. His main challenge as a policeman seems to be protecting the vendors at the village market from the EU health and safety inspectors who are charged with ensuring that regulations are followed and who are authorized to hand out fines to those who attempt to circumvent the rules.

Bruno is an orphan who found his calling as a soldier serving with United Nations forces in Bosnia. Coming home, he had a mentor in one of his former commanders in Bosnia and through the efforts of that man, now the mayor of the town, Bruno became chief of police and found a sense of family at last in the people of his village. He is completely devoted to them and to the welfare of his community.

That community includes some Arabs, descendants of immigrants from North Africa. One particular family is well-known and highly esteemed by the close-knit citizenry. The village is rocked when the patriarch of that family, a man who was considered a war hero who had won the Croix de Guerre for his services in Vietnam, is brutally murdered, with a swastika carved on his chest. The murder brings to the fore hidden racial and cultural resentments and threatens to rip apart the unity and the easy-going rhythms that have long marked life in this community.

The national police are charged with the investigation of the crime, but Bruno, as the local expert, is attached to the team of investigators. It soon develops that the roots of the crime reach far back to World War II days and the role that the French Resistance played. It seems that the victim may not have always been the hero that his family believed him to be. The writer was able to seamlessly weave in details of the World War II experience in the French countryside which helped to make the story more realistic.

Throughout the investigation, Bruno continues his daily interaction with all the locals, the friends and neighbors who are a part of his circle. We get to know them all as they meet at the market, play tennis or rugby, visit the local caves which contain prehistoric paintings, and especially as they share meals. And what fabulous meals! Food is an integral part of this story. Well, it is France, isn't it?

This is the first in a series. I learned about it through one of my blogger buddies, Snap of Tales from Twisty Lane. It's a favorite of hers and since I have found that she and I often agree on reading material, I was interested to give it a try. I'm glad I did. It is well-written, humanistic in philosophy, and the characters are believable and thoroughly likable. It actually reminded me somewhat of Alexander McCall Smith's Botswana series featuring Precious Ramotswe. Moreover, I thought the plot and the pacing of the story were deftly done and, even though the story moved at the pace of country life and there was not a lot of action, it was sufficient to keep the reader interested and turning the pages to see what Bruno would do next.

I particularly enjoyed the writer's vivid descriptions of what must be a truly beautiful region. It is obviously a place that he knows well and loves, and I look forward to learning more about it in future books in the series.

See all 453 customer reviews...

Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker PDF
Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker EPub
Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker Doc
Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker iBooks
Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker rtf
Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker Mobipocket
Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker Kindle

? Ebook Download Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker Doc

? Ebook Download Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker Doc

? Ebook Download Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker Doc
? Ebook Download Bruno, Chief of Police: A Novel of the French Countryside [1] (Bruno Chief Of Police), by Martin Walker Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar