

The Flemish House: Inspector Maigret #14
The Flemish House
'The father of contemporary European detective fiction' Ann Cleeves
She wasn't an ordinary supplicant. She didn't lower her eyes. There was nothing humble about her bearing. She spoke frankly, looking straight ahead, as if to claim what was rightfully hers.
'If you don't agree to look at our case, my parents and I will be lost, and it will be the most hateful legal error...'
Maigret is asked to the windswept, rainy border town of Givet by a young woman desperate to clear her family of murder. But their well-kept shop, the sleepy community and its raging river all hide their own mysteries.
This novel has been published in a previous translation as The Flemish Shop.
'Compelling, remorseless, brilliant' John Gray
'A supreme writer . . . unforgettable vividness' Independent
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About The Flemish House
Reviews for The Flemish House: Inspector Maigret #14
John Banville
Financial Times
Gem-hard soul-probes . . . not just the world's bestselling detective series, but an imperishable literary legend . . . he exposes secrets and crimes not by forensic wizardry, but by the melded powers of therapist, philosopher and confessor
Boyd Tonkin
The Times
Terrific...the 75 Inspector Maigret books are almost uniformly wonderful. They are not crime or even detective fiction as ordinarily understood...they are about human foibles, moral failings and compromises, set in an evocatively atmospheric Paris
David Mills
Sunday Times
A great writer of detail, of atmosphere
Leïla Slimani
Financial Times
A genius … Simenon broke all the rules
Jake Kerridge
Daily Telegraph
The novels brim with atmosphere, insight and intelligence . . . quite unlike anything else written before or since
India Knight
The Times
Exceptional… Simenon’s writing still seems fresh…one of the great pleasures is the summoning of France’s many landscapes and accompanying social milieux . . . There is also, and it’s a chief glory of the books, a whole range of different Parises, from the shiny rich to the hypocritical bourgeois middle to the struggling, furious world of the poor, desperate and professionally criminal
John Lanchester
Times Literary Supplement
I never read contemporary fiction–with one exception: the works of Simenon
T.S. Eliot One of the most important writers of our century
Gabriel García Márquez An astute observer of human nature, writing in a spare and vivid style
Amor Towles