Pre-Maigret short stories
The introduction to The 13 Culprits opens with a fun quote from author Georges Simenon: “I haven’t written that much. I’m already 29 and I’ve only published 277 books . . .” A few years before that statement, in 1929, Simenon was hired to write a series of short mystery stories for the French magazine Détective. Those stories were called The 13 Mysteries, The 13 Enigmas, and The 13 Culprits. These 39 Détective stories are formatted in such a way that the reader is presented with the facts of the case so that he or she can try solving the mystery themselves before the detective weighs in at the end with his conclusions. These stories may have eventually been published in book form in French, but I believe the Culprits are the only ones to have made it into English translation thus far, and not until 2002.
In The 13 Culprits stories, the suspect in the case has already been tracked down and in some cases apprehended before the story starts. The details of the crime are revealed to us through the interrogation of the suspect. These questionings are conducted by an examining magistrate named Froget. He bears more than a passing resemblance to Simenon’s famous detective Inspector Maigret, who would make his debut in 1931. Froget is a large laconic man of pale skin and surly temperament. He only says as much as he absolutely needs to, and he intimidates his quarry with uncomfortable silences. Froget definitely seems more tightly wound than Maigret. You wouldn’t want to be questioned by either one of these formidable law enforcement professionals, but at least Maigret seems like someone with whom one might enjoy drinking a beer.
I’ve read about 30 of Simeon’s novels, but this is my first experience with his short stories. I can’t say that I was thrilled with this collection. The solve-it-yourself format of the stories amounts to a lot of confusing details being dumped on you before Froget declares his verdict. You already know that the culprits are guilty, for the simple reason that Froget is questioning them. With the whodunit already figured out, it is still left for Froget to ascertain the how and the why. The process of solving these cases is very similar to that employed by American teenaged sleuth Encyclopedia Brown. The suspect slips up with some contradictory or erroneous detail in their testimony, by which Froget nails them. In most cases, Froget really doesn’t have enough evidence for a conviction, but that’s not even considered since the whole point of the story is merely to solve the puzzle.
Unlike Encyclopedia Brown, however, the crimes here are more hard-boiled than some kid stealing a bike. Simenon delivers the gritty film-noir look at the underbelly of Paris that one expects from him. He also doesn’t shy away from sexual content. One story even has a transvestite, which was pretty racy for 1929. Just as in his Maigret novels, Simenon comes up with some really interesting and compelling back stories for these culprits, but they feel very rushed in this short format. One thing that’s interesting about these mysteries is that almost none of these culprits are French. Instead, they come from all over Europe, plus one African from the Congo.
If you’re a fan of Simenon, these stories may be worth a look, but don’t expect anything that measures up to a Maigret novel. The 13 Culprits stories feel like a series of quick sketches leading up to the creation of Maigret. Since Simenon wrote about 500 books, however, he’s got plenty of other mysteries that are more worth your time than this.
Stories in this collection
Ziliouk
Monsieur Rodrigues
Madame Smitt
The “Flemings”
Nouchi
Arnold Schruttinger
Waldemar Strvzeski
Philippe
Nicolas
The Timmermans
The Pacha
Otto Müller
Bus