I have continued on my journey of Simenon's Maigret with a book that has been published as Maigret and the Yellow Dog, The Yellow Dog and probably other names on top of that. It was one of the earlier books but many of the elements that define Maigret for me were already starting to gel.
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Maigret is called to Concarneau where one of the upper class was non-fatally shot. He has to figure out what is going on as more violent crimes, non-fatal and fatal pile up. Oh and there’s a yellow dog wandering around the town that no one’s seen before.
My impression from the back over was that this was going to be a busman’s hobby. Maigret goes on vacation so of course there’s a murder. Blame Jessica Fletcher for my thinking that. No, Maigret was dealing with another assignment and gets pulled in because he’s the closest superintendent. I like that Maigret is a professional.
This is the first Maigret novel I’ve read that felt a little like an Agatha Christie work. A rural setting. A small number of suspects, although to his credit, when Maigret gives a summary two thirds of the way through, he explicitly states it could always be someone they know nothing about. It really is a who-done-it. And Maigret even pulls a Poirot and gathers all the suspects to explain it all at the end.
With all that said, Maigret doesn't methodically gather together clues like puzzle pieces. He observes people and figures out what makes them tick. He gets into people’s heads. When he knows who you are, he knows what you’ve done. I continue to find that the world of Maigret is one of around-the-size-of-life characters.
And Simenon does not fail to be compelling. In Piotr the Latvian, the first Maigret book, I felt there were some pulpy elements. In Yellow Dog, which wasn’t written long after, those are gone. The story is grounded in believable human nature.
I am still very much of a novice in the ways of Maigret. I don’t think I can consider myself a proper Maigret reader until I’ve read at least ten books and bingeing the series will burn me out on it. (I’ll still probably read at least that many this year) I’m also still depending on ‘best of’ lists to decide what to read next, although I am amused that some of these lists have no crossovers.
The Yellow Dog showed up in more than one list, though, and I can appreciate why.