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Salim Bachi - Paris Noir

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Salim Bachi Paris Noir
  • Book:
    Paris Noir
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    Akashic Books
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  • Year:
    2008
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    New York
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    978-1-933354-63-7
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Paris Noir: summary, description and annotation

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Paris Noir Brand-new stories by: Didier Daeninckx, Jean-Bernard Pouy, Marc Villard, Chantal Pelletier, Patrick Pcherot, DOA, Herv Prudon, Dominique Mainard, Salim Bachi, Jrme Leroy, Laurent Martin, and Christophe Mercier.

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Paris Noir

Introduction

Enter the dream

Good to finally hear from you but dont forget to send me an introduction This - photo 1

Good to finally hear from you but dont forget to send me an introduction.

This e-mail from Akashic Books publisher Johnny Temple has been blinking on my computer screen for the last two days. But when I chose to work in book publishing, it was precisely to avoid having to write anything; I want to stay in the background, the way a bass player stands in the dark and smiles as he watches the guitarist launch into a wild solo.

I kept going around and around without a clue, like a mouse on its wheel, until I finally decided to visit Momo, the old guy who sells used books in my neighborhood. If Paris is still and always will be a noir city, its in part because of Momo and his toiling colleagues, the dozens of small, independent bookstore owners who sell old pulp fiction from the 50s through the 70s. Amateurs meet every weekend and swap their own finds for new treasures. Momos the one who trained me as a kid by handing me Goodis, Thompson, Chandler. So you can just see him going soft all over at the idea of the Srie Noire making it to the American scene. We, the French, are good at importing things... but exporting is another story.

Were having a smoke outside the well-lit caf, Momo and me. Its been eight months now that smokers walk around the sidewalks in circles like penitents. My first time in New York, I got a kick out of watching the ballet of smoked-out people moving in and out of bars. Never in France, I said to myself. But we French end up doing everything exactly as the Americans do, a few years later at best. So the time is right to include Paris in the Akashic Books Noir Series. Momo thinks, and rightly so, that Im short of brilliant ideas, so there he goes drawing a historical picture of Paris, the city of crime. He tells me about the working classes, exceptionally dangerous, who peopled the belly of Paris in the nineteenth century, until the bourgeoisie kicked them out with big avenues and urban renewal under the reign of the late, unlamented Baron Haussmann.

Two beers later, Momo is on the Butte Montmartre with the gangsters of the 30s and 50s, the early days of junk deals, streetwise Parisian kids, and loud, foul-mouthed prostitutes whose slang could frighten even the bigwigs. The problem with Momo is that he loves beer and the more hes in love, the less clear his ideas are. Hes now on to the filmmaker Melville, the actor Alain Delon (hes one of our specialties like unpasteurized Camembert), and sepia photographs.

But all of a sudden it dawns on me that practically nothing of this improvised lecture has registered, and I get all tense. No wonder you learn things in classrooms, not sitting on hard stools in cafs where the atmosphere is too bright (as in the famous Atmosphre, atmosphre, estce que jai unegueule datmosphre, moi? Arlettys indignant response to Louis Jouvet in the film Htel du Nord).

Back in front of my insomniac computer, this is what I tell myself: The key thing to say is that Paris is a city that lives, and thus dies, every day. No point hiding behind history or war memories. What is a threat to Paris, to its noir dimension even, is potential museumification, the possibility of the city turning into a big theme park. In Paris, after all, everything is still there. All you have to do is look around with eyes wide open. In the shadows of his big car, the chauffeur in Marc Villards story dreams about saving the love of his life, a prostitute stranded on the asphalt like a bird caught in an oil spill. Further up north, around the train station, Jrme Leroy follows in the footsteps of a guy on the run with the feds at his heels, and the men in black arent simply agents of the FBI. Concurrently, Salim Bachi lets us examine two young men of Arab descent who have a hard time fitting into a closed society; unfortunately, whether in Paris, New York, or Karachi, its hard to resist the temptation of violence, always present, insidious, and sneaky.

And what about that Chinese guy, delightfully depicted by Chantal Pelletier? He thought hed have a taste of the famous French cuisine... until he realizes that the choice dish will be himself.

Far from clich postcard photos, we witness the revenge of the waiters along with Jean-Bernard Pouy: They go to a lot of trouble to locate an unknown jogger who has mysteriously stopped taking his daily run through the Place des Vosges and disappeared.

Everything takes place in cafs, not just Momos beer-soaked history lessons. Thats where the doomed lovers in this volume meet to secretly celebrate Christmas. Didier Daeninckxs reporter, an expert in tracking rumors on the Internet, was also seen for the last time in a caf, before getting stabbed to death on rue des Degrs. But who knows, maybe those werent actually rumors after all. And speaking of rumors, dont tell DOA that the violence of the Russians is only a rumor. Let him tell you about his precious girlfriend, a Russian model who loved diamonds too much to go unnoticed. Behind the fake jewelry and the glamour, the fashion world hides serious predators. Ask Layla, Dominique Mainards heroine in La Vie en Rose, if she really sees life in rosy tints. To her, life is nothing like a reality-TV show; the budding young singer who dreamed of having top billing will end up very low on this earth. No Grammy for the young dreamer, only a body bag. Under its polished stones, Paris remains the place of daily tragedy; under the Parisian pavement, theres the Peloponnese. Like that son of Laurent Martins coming back home after a long exile to find that you cant escape from your ghosts or from the love you have lost.

Beyond the lights, beyond the cafs and bars, Paris is sometimes like a grave. Its a city you run away from, or at least dream of running from. But on every street corner, the past jumps at your throat like a grimacing hyena. Patrick Pcherot will take you for a walk into the heart of the 17th arrondissement; in fact, the Gestapo were based in that area in the early 40s. Some would give all the money in the world to have a dead memory, but when your mind starts playing tricks on you, life quickly turns into a nightmare. Or into madness... Watch Herv Prudon walk around the 14th arrondissement; if you ask him for directions, dont talk to him in English: Youll run the risk of having him answer, No comprendo The Stranger. My advice to you is to follow him without a word; take side streets, stroll with him along rue de la Sant, where youll find a jail, a psychiatric hospital, and Samuel Becketts last place of residence. Discover his magical Paris which exists only inside his head.

You dont inhabit your city, you dream it. All I can do now is invite you to enter the dream.

Aurlien Masson

Paris, France

August 2008

Part I

City of lights, city of darkness

The chauffeur

by Marc Villard

Les Halles

Vania

I wasnt too far from Les Halles, thats my fate.

Above the parking garage.

Right next to the Sunside with its tenor sax crazies. Id pace the streets at noon along with the type of people who never work, but also Krauts smashed on beer and sluts from the Midwest.

Leather and lobotomy.

Id walk on my shitty heels. The sexy black whore from Martinique. We worked our asses off, the pimps circled around, sold and resold the girls to each other; Alicia had even said to me, Vania, give up the street, you deserve better.

Yeah, right.

In Fort-de-France, my mother didnt have a job so Id send over piles of money to feed my two brothers. Incognito: She thought I was a nurse at the Htel Dieu hospital. Id open my legs, Id go, Oh, honey, yes, yes, and the bread left for Martinique.

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