Aimée Leduc
Encyclopedia
Aimée Leduc is a fictional character who first appeared in print in 1998. She is the creation of author Cara Black
Cara Black (author)
Cara Black is a bestselling American mystery writer. She is best known for her Aimée Léduc mystery novels featuring a female Paris-based private investigator. Black is included in the Great Women Mystery Writers by Elizabeth Lindsay 2nd edition. Her first novel, Murder in the Marais, was nominated...

. She is a Paris-based, modern, female, private investigator. The bestselling mystery series is called Aimée Leduc Investigations.

Aimée Leduc is a young expatriate American living in Paris, France during the 1990s. She has been described by Booklist as, "...a delightfully unbuttoned Audrey Hepburn for the twenty-first century….”, but with a punk-rock attitude and in far more dangerous settings. Leduc is a sharp, fashionable, hip, and quite headstrong young woman who has assumed the investigative mantle left to her by her father. After his death, she took control of his detective business. An ex-medical student and a computer-security analyst, she is smart and world savvy, though she follows her instincts and often leaps into trouble. During the course of investigations she often finds need for disguise or hacking into computer systems (usually with the aid of her computer expert assistant). Leduc is often placed in extreme danger and injured. In one dramatic scene in Murder in Bastille she was blinded, though later her vision was restored.

Though Chanel-wearing, Leduc's unconventional attitude can be compared with Sherlock Holmes' "Bohemian" lifestyle. As do many detectives, she has a satellite-system of oddball side characters. René Friant, a dwarf and computer expert, is her partner. Commissaire Morbier is her god-father and sometimes helps her on cases or with official leverage. Inspector Melac is her implacable, hardnosed rival on the police force, a kind of Inspector Kramer to Nero Wolfe.

The Leduc series often explores in realistic detail her fictional Parisienne community, ambience, and landscape. It is also notable for interweaving complex familial intrigue and emotions into the standard mystery plots. She is always in search of her father's murderer, her vanished mother, and, in the later books, involved with sibling-related subplots.

The Aimée Leduc Investigation series has been translated into five languages.

Awards

Aimée Leduc is included in the Great Women Mystery Writers, by Elizabeth Lindsay.

Murder in Marais was nominated for an Anthony Award (Best First Novel). Murder in the Sentier was nominated for two Anthony Awards (Best Novel and Best Cover Design).

Murder in the Rue de Paradis was listed in the Washington Post Best Books of 2008.

Works

  • Murder in the Marais (1998), ISBN 1-56947-212-2
  • Murder in Belleville (2000), ISBN 1-56947-279-3
  • Murder in the Sentier (2002), ISBN 1-56947-331-5
  • Murder in the Bastille (2003), ISBN 1-56947-364-1
  • Murder in Clichy (2004), ISBN 1-56947-411-7
  • Murder in Montmartre (2005), ISBN 1-56947-445-1
  • Murder on the Ile Saint-Louis (2007), ISBN 1-56947-475-3
  • Murder in the Rue de Paradis (2008), ISBN 1-56947-542-3
  • Murder in the Latin Quarter (2009), ISBN 1-56947-541-5
  • Murder in the Palais Royal (2010), ISBN 978-1-56947-620-8

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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