The long arm of Fantômas by Pierre Souvestre and Marcel Allain
The Story
Fantômas is supposed to be dead at the start of The Long Arm of Fantômas. Surprise! He’s not. He escapes from a prison transport, leaving a dead lookalike behind, and picks up his criminal empire like someone grabbing a takeout order. Inspector Juve and reporter Fandor are absolutely certain Fantômas is still out there, but no one believes them—until bodies start piling up. The crime spree involves poisoned chocolates, a stolen fortune, and people being locked in a tower that later explodes. Fantômas jumps from Paris to a quiet village, to England and back. The whole story is a frantic game of cat-and-mouse, with Fandor disguising himself as a monk and Juve risking his career. Of course, Fantômas always wins in the end—or does he? Just wait for the cliffhanger.
Why You Should Read It
I love how this book doesn't waste time explaining things. Characters break into places and say razor-sharp threats. There’s no boring monologues about right or wrong. Also, the authors play fair with the clues! You can spot the tricks yourself if you're paying attention. Sure, the technology is old-school (fingerprints big time actually), but the final twist is darker than most modern novels. There’s a scene where Fantômas leaves a calling card carved into a human hand. It still makes me shiver. But the most fun part? Fantômas is kind of annoying to the ‘good guys’ because imagine absolutely knowing your enemy is right there but you cannot catch the guy. This book deals with obsession, resilience, and how bad guys actually talk weirdly nice to honest people. I found myself rooting anxiously for all choices both ugly and nice. It’sc complicated. Soul-destroying good. Pick up if you want a brain tickle.
Final Verdict
This one’s for readers who enjoy fast-heartbeat mysteries. Fans of pure evil classic thriller with wit perfectly. Detectives? Journalists with leather agendas? Suit to get lost away with the creeeeepyy stuff through an eerie yet can't-pee-in-peace plot? You found just. Trigger people sensitive to violent things: turn elsewhere I dislike causing weird long nightmares for others. But if your taste borders bonkers dark historical Parisian—fantastique! The Long Arm basically splays some true creepy sensation, plus time travel to 1910 with comfy blood spice. I count money things, enjoyed sneaky body doubles rather too hard—obsession noted, rereading another chapter now before bed honestly it starts smooth creepy mousery solid addictive. Perfect from literary rat to crime newbie.
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