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Tropic moon

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"Simenon's romans durs are extraordinary: tough, bleak, offhandedly violent, suffused with guilt and bitterness, redolent of place ...utterly unsentimental, frightening in the pitilessness of their gaze, yet wonderfully entertaining." - John Banville A young Frenchman, Joseph Timar, travels to Gabon carrying a letter of introduction from an influential uncle.

He wants work experience; he wants to see the world.

But in the oppressive heat and glare of the equator, Timar doesn't know what to do with himself, and no one seems inclined to help except Adele, the hotel owner's wife, who takes him to bed one day and rebuffs him the next, leaving him sick with desire.

But then, in the course of a single night, Adele's husband dies and a black servant is shot, and Timar is sure that Adele is involved.

He'll cover for the crime if she'll do what he wants.

The fix is in. But Timar can't even begin to imagine how deep. In Tropic Moon, Simenon, the master of the psychological novel, offers an incomparable picture of degeneracy and corruption in a colonial outpost.

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Product Details
NYRB Classics
159017111X / 9781590171110
Paperback / softback
843.912
01/09/2009
United States
English
General
152 p.
21 cm
general /undergraduate Learn More