I received this book in exchange for a fair and honest review
Mayhem in Margaux by Jean-Pierre ALAUX and Noël BALEN
Winemaker Detective #6
ISBN: 978-1939474384
Trade Paperback - 153 pages
SYNOPSIS
It’s summer in Bordeaux. There’s a heat wave, the vineyards are suffering, vintners are on edge, and wine expert Benjamin Cooker’s daughter is visiting. A tragic car accident draws the Winemaker Detective and his assistant Virgile into a case where the stakes are very personal, and they uncover the dirty secrets hiding behind some of Bordeaux’s finest grand cru classé wines from Margaux. [provided by the publisher] *** An episode in a long successful French mysteries series that is a hit television series now in its fourth season and attracting an audience of over 4 million. The series is a huge success in France, Belgium and Switzerland. ***
REVIEW
Do you like wine? Do you like mysteries? If so then I say
you should give this series a shot. This was another exciting installment in
the Wine Detective series. From the first page I feel as if I am transported
straight to France and am right in the midst of this mystery. You will go on a
journey of Merdoc and its wine estates while trying to solve this murder mystery.
I like how this mystery has wine and food has a part in the story. After
reading this book I want to go to France even more. I also like hearing about
Benjamin’s family and how they have their own little stories within a story. That
is another part of what makes these books nice to read. You feel for Ben in
this story since it was thought that it was his assistant who was killed. These mysteries are short
so they are quick reads. I am looking forward to the next book in this series.
Each one that I have read so far has been very good and enjoyable.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Jean-Pierre Alaux and Noël Balen, wine lover and music lover respectively, came up with
the idea for the Winemaker Detective series while sharing a meal, with a bottle of Château Gaudou 1996, a red wine from Cahors with smooth tannins and a balanced nose.
ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR
Translator Sally Pane studied French at State University of New York Oswego and the Sorbonne before receiving her Masters Degree in French Literature from the University of Colorado. She has translated several titles in this series.
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Visit each blogger on the tour: tweeting about the giveaway everyday of the Tour will give you 5 extra entries each time! (just follow the directions on the entry-form) Global giveaway open internationally: 2 US residents will win a print copy of this book 3 residents of any country will receive a digital copy
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GUEST POST
The Diamonds of
Bordeaux and the Versailles of Médoc
The Winemaker
Detective series has become an “obsession” for some bloggers, with its
excursions into French wine country, its gourmet attitude, and its cozy
mysteries. Here translator Sally Pane shares some details about her experience
translating the latest one in the series: Mayhem in Margaux, which was released by Le French Book this
month.
Translating the mystery Mayhem in Margaux was an intriguing introduction to the Médoc
region of France. The main storyline revolves around a murder, and there are
many twists and turns that take you through the world of wine. I found myself
surprised when I read the descriptions of this district of Bordeaux, with its
mixture of sand dunes, coastal lagoons and pine forests, to think of wine, and
not just any wine! But the Médoc is a peninsula that lies between the Atlantic
coastline and the estuary of the Gironde River, and the sandy terrain is what
makes the area so suitable for vineyards. This is where some of the world’s most
important wine villages are, and some of the world’s most expensive wines come
from their châteaux, such as Château Margaux itself. I learned that more fine
wine is produced here, especially in that part called the Haut-Médoc, than anywhere
else in the world.
At a
certain point in the story, when Benjamin and Virgile have been lured to the
grounds of an estate, Benjamin tells a legend about the Lord of Margaux who
became the talk of Versailles when he showed up dressed in a coat “adorned with
dozens of buttons that shone like diamonds.” Apparently, through the ages, the
Garonne and Dordogne rivers have carried polished rocks down from the Pyrenees,
and they’re quite beautiful: purple quartz, Jurassic cherts, golden flint. I
did a little investigating myself into this Lord of Margaux, and I found out he
was guillotined during the French Revolution.
The château is described in the
book when Cooker and his wife and daughter Margaux are there for a gala. This
is where Margaux has her first ill-fated encounter with the château’s director.
Rebuilt in 1810, with neo-classical Palladian columns, it has been called the
“Versailles of the Médoc.” I read that its most recent buyer in 1977, Andre
Mentzelopoulos, was drawn to the ionic columns adorning the peristyle, which
reminded him of his native Greece. I wondered if this man, who effected major
innovations to winemaking, spoke several languages and was fond of quoting
Winston Churchill, could have been some of the inspiration for the bi-cultural
Cooker character.
Visit each blogger on the tour: tweeting about the giveaway everyday of the Tour will give you 5 extra entries each time! (just follow the directions on the entry-form) Global giveaway open internationally: 2 US residents will win a print copy of this book 3 residents of any country will receive a digital copy
A chateau,wine, mystery what's not to like? Looking forward to reading
ReplyDeleteThanks for a chance to win
This is a book I'm looking forward to reading! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteMy favorite series of all time was The Cat Who..... series.
ReplyDeletesuefarrell.farrell@gmail.com
thanks for your nice review. Did you read it in its entirety? Thank God, no it was not his assistant who was killed! Emma at FBT
ReplyDeleteYes I did I just went back to read my review and realized I worded it wrong. Thank you
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