Extraordinary Adventures of Arsene Lupin, Gentleman-Thief

Maurice LeBlanc

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Galileo Publishing img Link Publisher

Belletristik / Krimis, Thriller, Spionage

Description

The creator of the Arsene Lupin, Maurice Leblanc, was born in Rouen in 1864. At the request of a Paris magazine, Je Sais Tout, he began a series of stories featuring the character Lupin, a 'gentleman thief', which appeared in this publication, starting in 1907. The blueprint for this new magazine was England's Strand Magazine in which Conan Doyle had first introduced his character Sherlock Holmes. So, Lupin was to be the French Sherlock Holmes and indeed became as famous, if not more so in French realms, than his English counterpart. The stories were wildly successful and later led to plays, TV adaptations and movies. The most memorable of these adaptations for an anglophone audience being the recent (but ongoing) Netflix series 'Lupin', starring Omar Sy. However, before this, in 1919 Agatha Christie reportedly considered basing her first detective on Lupin. Jean Cocteau wrote about the stories in his diaries, Sartre described Lupin as 'the Cyrano of the underworld.' When Leblanc died in 1941 Ellen Queen pronounced him as 'the greatest thief in the whole world'. Even T. S. Eliot was an avid reader of Lupin stories. The translation by Texeira da Matos is immaculate and reads as effortlessly today as it would have done in 1907 when this collection was first published. The book comprises 9 stories: the arrest of ars ne lupin, arsene lupin in prison, the escape of arsene lupin, the mysterious traveller, the queen's necklace the seven of hearts madame imbert's safe, the black pearl, sherlock holmes arrives too late. How can we describe the stories in this book? Simply by saying that Lupin may be a rogue, a Robin Hood, but he is certainly no villain. He is a master of disguise and without doubt the most accomplished thief ever to inhabit the pages of crime fiction. Lupin stories are sheer, unadulterated, entertainment.

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