Pure Joy
You would like a review to be fair, but anything I could say would not approach the fun of this series without compromising the story. This one isn't about petanque, it isn't about forged art, it isn't about love, murder or a Ville in France, but these ingredients keep showing up, getting blended, and reforming into the jewels Ian Moore is so brilliant at contriving. Richard, still married, yet freely in love with his partner, still confusing and confused, still manages to be his own red herring and solution to his story, is a joy and becoming a very good book friend. The other women in his life, and there are at least two who plan to be with him in further adventures, are legion and legend, as Valérie and his housekeeper, but his "spy" partner (as she describes a partnership role for herself), Oriane-the-spy, and his wife don't seem to let go, fine. He can handle but not juggle them all, just more fun for us all. Of course, I'm being vague, which I hate, but I must or simply ruin everything. Read and you will agree with a smile - the world is MUCH better with Richard and Ian Moore in it, and that should be enough recommendation and review for all of us at this point. Bravo, mon ami. Je t'aime toujours, pour toujours. Merci.