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Pascal Garnier

    Pascal Garnier was a novelist, short story writer, children's author, and painter whose fiction often explored the darker aspects of ordinary provincial life. Writing from his home in the Ardèche mountains, his work utilized a noir palette, breathing life into characters drawn from everyday settings. Despite its frequently somber tone, Garnier's prose was illuminated by strikingly beautiful imagery and a distinctively dry wit. His distinctive literary style, often compared to Georges Simenon, offered a unique blend of suspense and understated humor.

    Low Heights
    Too Close to the Edge
    The Islanders
    Moon in a Dead Eye
    How's the Pain?
    Gallic Noir
    • 2020

      Long Way Off

      • 112 pages
      • 4 hours of reading
      3.5(48)Add rating

      The final translation of the late, great Garnier; one last chance to be entranced by the surreal, bleak landscape of his bizarrely brilliant world.

      Long Way Off
    • 2019

      C'est la Vie

      • 112 pages
      • 4 hours of reading
      3.6(77)Add rating

      A writer finds fame and misfortune after winning a big literary prize and embarking on a roadtrip with his son.

      C'est la Vie
    • 2018

      Gallic Noir

      • 400 pages
      • 14 hours of reading
      4.2(30)Add rating

      Pascal Garnier's `deliciously dark and painfully funny' noirs, now collected in three volumes.

      Gallic Noir
    • 2017

      Low Heights

      • 192 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      3.7(100)Add rating

      At least vultures have the decency to wait until their prey's dead before picking it apart ... After losing his wife and suffering a stroke, cantankerous retiree Édouard Lavenant has moved from Lyon to a village in the mountains with his put-upon nurse, Thérèse. After a man comes to the door claiming to be Édouard's long-lost son, it isn't long before the local vultures are circling overhead ...

      Low Heights
    • 2016

      The Eskimo Solution

      • 136 pages
      • 5 hours of reading
      3.4(82)Add rating

      Life imitates art in Pascal Garnier's offbeat tale of a crime writer and the murderous protagonist of his novel.

      The Eskimo Solution
    • 2016

      Too Close to the Edge

      • 248 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      3.8(147)Add rating

      Recently widowed grandmother Éliette is returning to her house in the mountains when her car breaks down. A stranger offers help and Éliette gives him a lift, glad of the company and interruption to her routine. A tale of retirement and calm domesticity, with a hint of menace about to explode.

      Too Close to the Edge
    • 2015

      Boxes

      • 112 pages
      • 4 hours of reading
      3.6(193)Add rating

      Brice and Emma had bought their new home together. Then Emma disappeared. Now, he awaits her return. He gradually comes to know his new neighbors including Blanche, an enigmatic woman in white, who has lived alone since the death of her father, to whom Brice bears a curious resemblance . . .

      Boxes
    • 2014

      The Islanders

      • 144 pages
      • 6 hours of reading
      3.8(202)Add rating

      Just before Christmas in Versailles. Olivier has come to bury his mother, but the impending holidays and icy conditions have delayed the funeral.While trapped in limbo at his mother's flat, a chance encounter brings Olivier back in touch with childhood friend Jeanne and her blind brother, Rodolphe.Rodolphe suggests they have dinner together, along with a homeless man he's taken in. As the wine flows, dark secrets are spilled, and there's more than just hangovers to deal with the next morning . . .

      The Islanders
    • 2014

      Fabien and Sylvie had both known their marriage was no longer working. And yet when Sylvie is involved in a fatal car accident, her husband is stunned to discover that she had a lover who died alongside her. With thoughts of revenge on his mind, Fabien decides to find out about the lover's widow, Martine, first by stalking her, then by breaking into her home. He really needs to get Martine on her own. But she never goes anywhere without her formidable best friend, Madeleine ...

      The Front Seat Passenger
    • 2013

      Moon in a Dead Eye

      • 127 pages
      • 5 hours of reading
      3.8(275)Add rating

      "Combines a sense of the surreal with a ruthless wit."--The Observer Given the choice, Martial would not have moved to Les Conviviales. But Odette loved the idea of a new retirement village in the south of France. So that was that. At first it feels like a terrible mistake: they're the only residents and it's raining nonstop. Then three neighbors arrive, the sun comes out, and life becomes far more interesting and agreeable. Until, that is, some gypsies set up camp just outside their gated community . . . Pascal Garnier is a leading figure in contemporary French literature. He died in 2010.

      Moon in a Dead Eye