Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Jules Maigret (French: [ʒyl mɛɡʁɛ]), or simply Maigret, is a fictional French police detective, a commissaire ("commissioner") of the Paris Brigade Criminelle (Direction Régionale de la Police Judiciaire de Paris:36, Quai des Orfèvres), created by writer Georges Simenon. The character's full name is Jules Amédée François Maigret.

  2. In this article from our print edition, Peter Haining examines the legacy of Belgian author Georges Simenon’s classic fictional detective Jules Maigret. “The Sherlock Holmes of France” is a description that has been given to Commissaire Jules Maigret, and in terms of worldwide fame and popularity he certainly deserves to be bracketed with Britain’s most famous detective.

  3. Sep 13, 2024 · Jules Maigret, fictional character, an unassuming, compassionate, and streetwise Parisian police commissioner who is the protagonist of more than 80 novels by Georges Simenon. Simenon’s books featuring Inspector Maigret include Pietr-le-Letton (1931; The Case of Peter the Lett ), Le Chien jaune (1931; “The Yellow Dog,” Eng. trans.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Prolific and Ambitious
    • An Intuitive Investigator
    • So Frenchy, So Simple

    A prolific writer, Simenon published on average six novels per year. He could write a book in 11 days: eight days for the composition and three for the correction. (Simenon, prolific in more ways than one, claimed to have slept with more than 10,000 women.) Simenon wrote accessible texts, with short sentences and simple vocabulary. He explained in ...

    “Comprendre et ne pas juger” (understand and judge not), was said to be Simenon’s motto. Accordingly, he built his oeuvre around psychological investigations. The motto can be applied as well to his detective hero. Biographer Lucille Beckernotes Simenon writes “impressionistic notations of subtle psychological states, sensory impressions, and minut...

    Screen adaptations rarely modernise the setting. Apart from the French director Claude Barmawho translated Maigret in the contemporary 1970s, they offer period pieces of picturesque nostalgia set in the 1950s. Simenon’s world“of second-class hotels and third-class railway carriages, of drifters, bargemen, tarts and luckless creditors” is rendered i...

  4. Nov 28, 2016 · Pietr-le-Letton (Maigret and the Enigmatic Latvian) – 1930. This 1930 novel marks the transition point for Simenon from writing popular novels under pseudonyms to becoming a recognised writer. His main publisher, Fayard, was unsure about this book at first, doubting it would be appealing to the general public.

    • Sarine Arslanian
    • Is Jules Maigret a real person?1
    • Is Jules Maigret a real person?2
    • Is Jules Maigret a real person?3
    • Is Jules Maigret a real person?4
  5. Mar 16, 2016 · He also throws bits of his own life into Maigret’s, the devotion to pipes and beer not least. Maigret’s persona, on the other hand, is largely inspired by real-life Commissaire Guillaume, le grand patron of the Police Judiciaire (PJ, pronounced pé’ji), who was in charge of the most famous criminal investigations of the time. A smoker of ...

  6. People also ask

  7. Sep 12, 2022 · Maigret knows that people want to tell their stories, and, if prompted, will. Listening, not inquiring, is the detective’s gift; inner life, in these mysteries, manifests only as fragmented speech.

  1. People also search for