Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Review: "A Murder Most French," Colleen Cambridge


A major pleasure of Colleen Cambridge’s “An American in Paris” series is the author’s spot-on depiction of the fabulous Julia Child.


“Her eyes widened as she bit into it, and she grinned. ‘Ye gods, do you taste that. Magnifique! And we picked them ourselves! That’s why they’re so damned perfect!'"


Of course, I never met Child. But I think I gained a solid impression of the grande dame through watching “Julia” on Max (Sarah Lancashire’s portrayal is peerless) and a PBS documentary, as well as reading Child’s memoir, My Life in France. Not to mention all the bits and pieces of “The French Chef” I saw while growing up.


And so I declare, that passage above is Julia Child, in a Paris kitchen in 1950, sautéing les campignons de Paris in slabs of butter. The mushrooms were indeed picked off the walls of the Catacombs by Julia and our protagonist/sleuth, Tabitha Knight.


Yes, the Catacombs. This is a murder-mystery, mind.


Tabitha is an American who lives with her French grandfather and his partner—the “monsieurs”—in an elegant townhouse right across the street from the Childs. Tabitha is resourceful and has certain mechanical skills gained from her wartime work as a riveter.


In this, her second case, she investigates the death of two prominent chefs. Both drank from bottles of rare vintage wines they had received as gifts. But didn’t the Nazis, who occupied Paris during World War II, ravage famous wine collections all over the city?


Meanwhile, the merchants in Tabitha and Julia’s neighborhood market are being attacked and vandalized. What is going on?


Grand-père and Oncle Rafe, who fought for the Resistance during the war, tell Tabitha all about the Germans actitivies during the occupation. Monsieur Michel, the mushroom vendor, leads the two women on an expedition to the grim, maze-like Catacombs, where bones and skulls line the walls.


Tabitha is intrigued to learn that both chefs were involved in a famous restaurant, now long closed—the Maison de Verre (House of Glass). The wine, the Nazis, the Catacombs—they all must have something to do with the murders. Tabitha presses on with her detecting, even though she is greatly testing the patience of the handsome Inspecteur Merveille. If they weren’t at such odds with each other, might they have a romance?


No time for that. There’s another killing, her two beloved monsieurs are placed in danger, and Tabi herself must physically outwit the murderer before the crime is solved.

This series is lightweight and fun and utterly enjoyable. I appreciate the fact that while Julia is a significant presence in the book, she’s not the sleuth. She’s Julia, chopping garlic on the double-quick, roasting a savory “Madame Poulet” and whipping up petites charlottes de pommes for dessert. Bon appétit!


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