The Song Peddler of the Pont Neuf

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Pub Date Sep 04 2018 | Archive Date Jan 31 2019

Description


PARIS, 1788

Facing bankruptcy after years of expensive wars, King Louis XVI calls a meeting of the Estates General, the ancient French legislature which has not met in 174 years.  The city hums with talk about modernizing the assembly and changing France into a constitutional monarchy.

Paul Gastebois, a confidential inquirer, isn't interested in politics.  He's busy with the daily tedium of detective work—following foreign diplomats for the Parisian police and helping artisanal guilds enforce their rules.  He'd like to make a name for himself solving crimes, but few cases have come his way. Then Paul is hired to find a song peddler who sang bawdy songs to crowds on the Pont Neuf.  The missing man had seen someone from his past on the bridge, and had vanished a few weeks later.

As Paul searches Paris for the song peddler, his investigation leads him into the world of underground publishing, where anonymous writers attack King Louis and his queen, Marie-Antoinette, and foreign governments manipulate public opinion for their own purposes. When a ruthless killer strikes, Paul must unravel the mystery of the song peddler's disappearance, or risk losing everything he holds most dear.



PARIS, 1788

Facing bankruptcy after years of expensive wars, King Louis XVI calls a meeting of the Estates General, the ancient French legislature which has not met in 174 years. The city...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781732497214
PRICE $9.99 (USD)

Average rating from 7 members


Featured Reviews

A good, solid historical mystery. I loved the plot, the characters and the well reaserched setting.
Recommended!
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC

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Thanks Settecento Press and netgalley for this ARC.

Laura Lebow knows how to create a mystery that keeps you reading til the end. Love the way the pieces all come together in a unexpected finale you won't expect.

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The Song Peddler of the Pont Neuf is a pretty good read. I liked being transported back in time to 1788 Paris, France. What a fascinating time in history. I thought Laura Lebow perfectly describes the historical details that brought the city and characters to life. The mystery and suspense that surrounds the story kept me fascinated and intrigued. I had no problem wanting to continue turning the pages until I was finished. I never knew what was going to happen next. I found there were a few twists and turns that I could not have predicted. I enjoyed the action, adventure and perfect pace of how it all flowed.
The Song Peddler of the Pont Neuf gets a well-deserved five stars from me. I highly recommend it. I look forward to reading more books by Laura Lebow in the future. She definitely has just earned herself a new fan of her work.
Great book!
I received this book from the author. This review is 100% my own honest opinion.

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VERDICT: Fascinating historical mystery on the eve of the French Revolution in Paris. Excellent integration of serious historical research into a clever and suspenseful plot.

After her great historical mysteries in the world of operas, Laura Lebow got the great idea to start a new series set in France! I’m thrilled to present to you The Song Peddler of the Pont Neuf and her private detective Paul Gastebois, in this first adventure set in Paris on the eve of the French Revolution.
Paul is actually a confidential inquirer, as was called at the time. On the side, he also works a bit for the police, mostly following foreign diplomats, just in case they would be up to no good.
One day, a man called Montigny comes to get Paul’s help to find his friend Gaspard. Gaspard is a song peddler on the Pont Neuf, but he has disappeared.
The beginning of the plot is quite straight forward, but what’s fascinating about the book is how Paul’s investigation will take him deeply into what’s going on then in the French capital, at the social, economical, and political level.
Lebow did a fantastic job of research – the bibliography listed at the end of the novel is a good hint. She was for instance very careful at using street names as they were named at the time. It’s not that easy, as many of these streets were destroyed later at the time of Napoleon in order to build larger streets.
As Paul goes along from clue to clue, he’s led to the world of bouquinistes and political pamphlets. Some were written in code, even seemingly given the appearance of erotic texts, in order to hide strong opposition to the monarchy.
The description of the streets, the poverty, the dirt, the smells makes you feel you are really there in Paris back in that time – far from the glamorous life of the City of lights…
And of course, there is plenty of fascinating information on the tough winter, the rise of the price of bread, and all combined elements that will make the time ripe for a revolution, when the people have had enough and can’t bear it any longer.
In these conditions, some dishonest people are ready to try anything to make money. Corruption is well depicted here among seamstresses and even the police.
And the reader meets people from all walks of life, including shopkeepers, actors, prostitutes, and monks.
The whole political situation is in fact connected to broader international issues, involving Austria of course (the land of origin of queen Marie-Antoinette), but also Prussia, Poland, etc.
Definitely a novel to recommend to anyone wanting to study the conditions and situations leading to the French Revolution, with serious historical research, details, plus the fun of a suspenseful plot. I’m looking forward to more adventures with Paul.

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The Song Peddler of the Pont Neuf by Laura Lebow is the first book in the Paul Gastebois Mystery Series. This book came highly recommended and I was pleased by how much I enjoyed it. I am now a new fan and look forward to reading more books by this author.

I liked several things about this book, the first is that it was a well-researched, well-written mystery story that takes place in 18th century Paris. We are introduced to a young man named Paul Gastebois who is a confidential inquirer, what can be considered a private investigator today. He does some investigative work for the police spying on foreign diplomats which is not that exciting until he is hired to find a missing person, a song peddler who usually works on the Pont Neuf bridge.

Through his work on this case, we get to know more about our main character, Paul who is very likable. He has a sister who he adores and dotes on, a brother who serves as a priest and with whom he had a falling out, and he is well liked by his friends. Unlike the many books set in this era that I read that feature the aristocratic French, the characters in this book are lower-middle-class, eking out a living in hard times.

Lebow brings 18th century Paris on the brink of the French Revolution to life with its political tensions, poverty and daily life for its suffering citizens. And it is in this setting that the mystery unfolds with some good twists that I did not see coming. The only thing missing for me were French expressions that would have made the book even more atmospheric. I am fluent in French, living in Quebec and I know how important language is when it comes to culture. However, this did not detract from the story but is my personal preference when reading books set in foreign countries.

If you enjoy historical mysteries and especially those set in France, The Song Peddler of the Pont Neuf is the perfect book to cozy up with. I enjoyed it thoroughly and eagerly await the next book in the series.

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