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A TREASURY OF REGRETS (Aristide Ravel French Revolution Mysteries)
 
 

A TREASURY OF REGRETS (Aristide Ravel French Revolution Mysteries) [Kindle Edition]

Susanne Alleyn
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

For police agent and investigator Aristide Ravel, the teeming streets and alleyways of Paris are a constant source of activity. And in the unruly climate of 1797, when gold and food are scarce, citizens will stop at very little to get what they need.

When Jeannette Moineau, an illiterate servant girl, is accused of poisoning the master of the house where she works, Ravel cannot believe she is guilty of the crime. With stubborn witnesses, a mysterious white powder, and stolen goods all stacked against her, however, he knows it will not be easy to clear her of the charges. But he finds an unexpected ally in Laurence, a young widow of the house, whose past surprisingly intersects his own.

In a large household brimming with bickering and resentment, everyone seems to have a motive for poisoning old Martin Dupont. But as more family members begin to turn up dead, the list of suspects rapidly dwindles. Tensions rise and Ravel and Laurence must probe the secrets of the city’s crafty politicians and confidence artists for clues to clear Jeannette’s name. Finding information, though, in dissolute post-revolutionary Paris, can lead to costly and dangerous demands.

Alleyn skillfully depicts her characters' flaws and strengths while plotting a fine puzzle mystery. If your patrons enjoy historicals and have not yet discovered Alleyn, put her latest on the must-read list.
-- Library Journal (starred review)

Treasury is also on LJ's list of the best genre fiction of 2007.

Library Journal: Best Books 2007

The arrest of a Paris kitchen maid, for the poisoning of wealthy Martin Dupont, owner of the house where she works, is the simple yet effective introduction to Susanne Alleyn's A Treasury of Regrets, an 18th-century mystery embellished by the drama of France's tumultuous post-revolution years. In a society still shadowed by the guillotine and haunted by its victims, mundane crime and punishment remain an issue.

Aristide Ravel is cast as a forerunner of the 20th century's laconic and lachrymose detective, a freelance investigator for the Paris police who finds that the poisoning of Dupont is rooted in a family's resentment and revenge, complicated by an intricate mesh of relationships upstairs and downstairs.

Ms. Alleyn skillfully portrays a household of suspects where crimes multiply while the unfortunate and innocent servant girl lies in a squalid jail cell. In the course of an investigation that takes him into hidden and forbidden corners of Parisian society, Ravel has to cope with revelations of his own past, and he is forced to relive the horror of the days when thousands of heads fell to the guillotine.

The author captures the atmosphere of a nation struggling toward a social and political unity untainted by the irrational violence and cruelty of those who toppled the monarchy. Ravel is a realistic and appealing observer of a developing society.
-- The Washington Times

A Treasury of Regrets combines the best in history and mystery. Rather than treating revolutionary Paris simply as window-dressing, Alleyn makes good use of the historical setting, both in creating her plot and in creating her characters, several of whom have lost loved ones to the guillotine. The mystery itself is artfully plotted and compelling; I was in due suspense as to whodunit.
-- The Historical Novels Review

That the reader is in the hands of an author interested in immaculate historical detail and accuracy is evidenced from page 1. ... The police have taken into custody a young servant girl accused by the family who employs her of poisoning the family patriarch. Determining her guilt or innocence is the objective in this traditionally plotted and atmospheric whodunit.
-- Booklist

Alleyn's historical authenticity--extending to a bibliography, glossary and other explanatory features--lifts her competent and conventional whodunit above the ordinary.
-- Kirkus Reviews




Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 509 KB
  • Publisher: Don Congdon Associates, Inc. (5 April 2007)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0042RV8AI
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #140,263 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Some good elements, but not as engrossing as the previous book, 12 May 2010
By 
L. J. Roberts (Oakland, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Treasury of Regrets (Hardcover)
First Sentence: Since the twenty-fourth of Frimaire, Aristide Ravel had dreamed at least a dozen times of the guillotine.

It begins with the poisoning death of Martin Dupont, the controlling head of a large household. A servant girl, Jeannette Moineau, is arrested. A member of the house, Laurence, asks the police for help as she does not believe the girl is guilty. Police investigator Aristide Ravel agrees to work with her, also discovering there is another link between them from the past. As others die, Ravel continues to search for motive believing if he finds the motive, he'll find the killer.

Ms. Alleyn does know how to bring Paris post-Revolution alive. Best of all, we come to know the period from the characters; their memories, the awkwardness in speech tying to confirm to the new forms of address, the new calendar and the challenges living day-to-day. It is enough past the Revolution that there is not the high level of fear, but recent enough that you sense people's uncertainty.

Aristide is a complex and interesting character yet, although his back story was provided, he never really came to life. In spite of the personal connection between him and Laurence, I sensed a chemistry or emotional connection. Even at the end, rather than being left with a sense of curiosity, I found I didn't particularly need to know what happens. For the other characters, perhaps because there were so many of them, none of them were well developed.

The story had a very powerful opening. There was fascinating information provided on the different figures involved in the Revolution, and the impact on the monetary structure. The plot, however, was very slow until about half-way through. As we progressed, I felt there was a rather too convenient twist and huge leaps in logic made to bring us to the proper conclusions.

In spite of the positive elements, and there were some, I did not find this book as engrossing as the previous books in the series. Had this been the first book I'd read of this series, I might not read another. Fortunately, I have read the other two books and loved them. I have great hopes that the next book will restore my faith in this author.

A TREASURY OF REGRETS (Hist Mys- Aristide Ravel-France-1797) - Okay
Alleyn, Susanne - 3rd in series (2nd published)
Thomas Dunne Books, ©2007, US Hardcover - ISBN: 9780312343712
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Treasury of Regrets, 12 April 2009
By 
Mr. Robert Griffen (United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Treasury of Regrets (Hardcover)
A very entertaining book, with some fascinating comments about Paris in the 19th Century. The story whilst not particularly strong is a very good read and one which was not easy to put down once started. I intend to get further stories by this author.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Alleyn just gets Better!, 1 July 2007
By Erin Bulman - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Treasury of Regrets (Hardcover)
Anticipating the second book of a series for me is like riding a

roller-coaster between high hopes and lows of remembered

disappointments. Happily, Alleyn's second historical mystery

featuring Aristide Ravel fulfills the former - it's a terrific book,

easily as good as GAME OF PATIENCE, maybe even better.

Pace, voice, dialogue, narrative are all beautifully done.

The fact is, I am a big fan of police procedurals, with

a pretty sceptical attitude toward historical mysteries. Why? Too

often, an author loses the main plot/story in an attempt to

recreate the setting of another time. On and on they go about the

details of an unpaved street, the people on the street, the quaint

habits, the colorful dress, the inconveniences... until the reader

can't remember why we are on the street in the first place. Alleyn's

talent is that she recreates the time IN the characters of her story,

not in describing their setting in excruciating detail. It is in

their views and reactions to events that the reader gains a

vivid insight into, in this case, the period in France shortly after

the French Revolution. The Place de la Concorde comes alive

through Aristide's reaction to the death of a dear friend on the

guillotine. There's another great example in the first scene where

we learn that Aristide is either an agent of the police, a police spy

or an informer... or maybe just a friend of the commissaire, through

the eyes of people of that time. (And, it recaps vital info about the

previous book without giving any of that story away. That's good

writing.)

Roughly, the story begins with the death of the head of a seemingly

well-off family, and the accusation and arrest of a simple servant

girl who is accused not only of the murder but of attempting to

poison the whole family (despite the complete lack of motive).

Alleyn weaves a twisty, fascinating narrative filled with lots of

secrets, more deaths in the family, and great scenes as Aristide

searches for the truth. I was often surprised, often guessed wrong,

and loved the terrific ending. All in all, a real winner.

Very Highly Recommended.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A page-turner historical mystery, 19 July 2007
By Mystery Fan - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Treasury of Regrets (Hardcover)
Appropriately (although accidentally), I began reading A Treasury of Regrets on Bastille Day. Aside from being a fine procedural with interesting plot twists, it is a fascinating look into post-revolutionary Paris. Alleyn gives us a taste of some of the sub-cultures of Parisian life which we never learned about in school. The characters live and breathe, and Alleyn communicates a real feel for the kind of political correctness which was necessary to survive that period in history.

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fascinating historical mystery, 21 April 2007
By Harriet Klausner - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Treasury of Regrets (Hardcover)
In 1797, the people are trying to form a republic to replace the dead monarchy. Police spy Aristide Ravel is at the jail when Laurence Faueconnet, the widow of revolutionary Aurele, arrives complaining that the police arrested her domestic servant Jeannette Moineau for killing her father-in-law, Monsieur Dupont. He became ill after eating a meal she served and arsenic was found in her room. Laurence doubts the girl could have hatched and carried out the plan.

Magdeline, the daughter of the late Dupont, does her best to convince the police that the servant murdered her papa. Aristide questions Jeannette and concludes the girl is innocent while someone within the Dupont family killed the deceased miserly patriarch. He questions the household and deems the victim's other daughter Charlotte knows more than she is saying. When he finds a family member hanging from a rope, he knows the murderer has struck again. Aristide believes everyone had a motive to see Dupont dead and the second victim as collateral damage. He plans to find out who and why.

A TREASURY OF REGRET is a fascinating historical mystery set in France just after the Revolution as readers see how the people adapt to the changes that came about. Aristide is an interesting character who cares that justice is served as he goes out of his way to prove the servant is innocent even when the legal system tries to guillotine his case with a fast fix. Susanne Alleyn provides a great tale that brings to life late eighteenth century France during a troubling fledgling attempt to legalize a fair justice system.

Harriet Klausner
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 5 reviews  4.6 out of 5 stars 
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A dangerous thrift it is to amass Only a treasury of regrets. He who holds them too close to his heart Suffers justly, and nothing forgets. &quote;
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