Emile Gaboriau (1833-1873) is an important figure in the history of detective fiction. A French journalist and novelist, he created the "roman policier" with a series of books involving private detective Monsieur Lecoq, who works logically. Lecoq was based on a real-life thief turned policeman named Francois Vidocq (1775-1857), whose memoirs mixed fiction and fact. Gaboriau's huge following was eclipsed by Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes. Interestingly, Holmes may have been at least partly based on another of Gaboriau's characters, consulting detective Father Tabaret, whose methods Monsieur Lecoq adopts in the first Lecoq book.
La Clique dorée
Emile Gaboriau
audiobookbook100 classic detectives. Golden Age of Detective Fiction. Illustrated : The Gold-Bug, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, The Innocence of Father Brown, Crime and Punishment and others
Wilkie Collins, Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, G. K. Chesterton, Emile Gaboriau, E. W. Hornung, M. McDonnell Bodkin, Guy Boothby, Jacques Futrelle, Melville Davisson Post, Ethel Lina White, Emmuska Orczy, Edgar Wallace, Algernon Blackwood, Maurice Leblanc, Gaston Leroux, Anna Katherine Green, Fergus Hume, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Robert Louis Stevenson, Dorothy L. Sayers, R. Austin Freeman
bookLa Corde au cou
Emile Gaboriau
bookMonsieur Lecoq
Emile Gaboriau
bookLa DĂ©gringolade
Emile Gaboriau
bookLa DĂ©gringolade
Emile Gaboriau
bookLes Esclaves de Paris
Emile Gaboriau
bookLa DĂ©gringolade
Emile Gaboriau
bookLe Petit Vieux des Batignolles
Emile Gaboriau
bookL'Argent des autres
Emile Gaboriau
bookL'Argent des autres
Emile Gaboriau
bookLes Esclaves de Paris
Emile Gaboriau
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