TLS on Georges Simenon
Two startlingly similar short novels appeared in France in 1942, at the centre of each a conscienceless and slightly creepy young man, unattached and adrift, the perpetrator of a meaningless murder. One was Albert Camusās LāĆtranger, the other La Veuve Couderc. Camusās novel rose to become part of the literary firmament, and is still glittering, intensely studied and praised ā to my mind, overpraised. Simenonās novel did not drop, but settled, so to speak, went the way of the rest of his work ā rattled along with decent sales, the occasional reprint, and was even resurrected as a 1950s pulp fiction paperback with a come-on tag line (āA surging novel of torment and desireā) and a lurid cover: busty peasant girl pouting in a barn, her skirt hiked over her knees, while a hunky guy lurks at the door ā price twenty-five cents.

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