The Gravediggers' Bread
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A claustrophobic thriller about love gone wrong, from the French master of noir
Blaise should never have hung around in that charmless little provincial town. The job offer that attracted him in the first place had failed to materialize. He should have got on the first train back to Paris, but Fate decided otherwise.
After a chance encounter with a beautiful blonde in the town post-office, Blaise is hooked. He realizes he'll do anything to stay by her side, and soon finds himself working for her husband, a funeral director. But the tension in this strange love triangle begins to mount, and eventually results in a highly unorthodox burial . . .
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
At the start of this sad, drab noir originally published in 1956 from Dard (Bird in a Cage), 30-year-old Blaise Delange, a frustrated job seeker, is waiting to use a phone booth in a provincial French town's post office. The occupant, an attractive blonde woman, finally leaves. After Blaise makes his three-minute call, he notices a wallet lying at his feet. Inside the wallet is a photo of the woman who used the phone before him, Germaine Castain, and her address. Blaise returns it to Germaine, who's married to the town's elderly undertaker, Achille Castain. Blaise makes a good impression on Achille, who offers him a job, which he takes to be near Germaine. Achille beats his wife, but she refuses to leave him. Meanwhile, Germaine has a secret lover, and at one point has Blaise take a message to him. A murder soon follows, and the miscreants escape to Paris, where justice predictably catches up with them. The plot may be familiar, but noir fans will enjoy the ride.