Author | |
---|---|
Publishing house | |
ISBNs | 978-5-367-02237-7 |
Binding | |
Pages | |
The weight | 0,480 kg |
Size | 130 × 200 mm |
Серия | |
Format | |
Standard | |
The year of publishing |
Delivery
€9,99
Not available
Not available
The cult film critic Mikhail Trofimenkov, an employee of the Kommersant publishing house, a professional historian who has received all possible and impossible awards in the field of journalism, appears in this book in an unexpected role. It opens to readers a dangerous, underground, ghostly Paris of crimes and conspiracies, mad werewolves and romantic bandits. Paris, which in criminal jargon is called "Panama": seeing it, it really is worth dying for nothing. Paris, where Georges Simenon, Pablo Picasso and Edith Piaf are the heroes of true detective stories. Sometimes the author imagines himself to be Sherlock Holmes, who can handle riddles that are unsolvable for detectives from Jewelers' Embankment, but he has the right to do so. Arriving in the capital of France for the first time twenty years ago, the author found himself in a cell on that same legendary embankment a week later, and since then fate has repeatedly brought him to the kings and jokers of the local underworld. After reading this book, you will never again be able to look at "Panama" through the eyes of a tourist: behind each facade you will see new "Paris secrets".