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  • Published: 30 September 2011
  • ISBN: 9781409019572
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 208

Confessions of a Map Dealer




'Micou is a master of comic characterisation and his writing style is often reminiscent of a young Graham Greene.' The Times.

The quote sums up Confessions of A Map Dealer perfectly - very readable/commerical and great fun.

'My first mistake was to be heterosexual.'
Such is one of several complaints in the first of four conversations between Henry Hart - who is a married father of two young girls - and his long-time friend, Darius Saddler - who is gay and unattached.
It is just over a year since the two men last met. Crippled and humiliated by debt, Hart - a dealer in antique maps - has managed to ruin his marriage, to commit an undeniable act of theft, and to become a suspect in France for a very serious crime.
With a lover on the side, a stolen map in his pocket, an ace French detective on his trail, a wife who is unusually cold and in the know, it is time for Hart to enlist the help of his oldest friend.
Confessions of a Map Dealer relates the attempts of Hart and Saddler to knit their lives together again, and to extricate Hart from the myriad problems he has brought upon himself.
A mystery, a one-sided love story, a tale of guilt, blackmail and self-delusion, Confessions of a Map Dealer is an intricate comedy of errors from a celebrated practitioner of the genre.

  • Published: 30 September 2011
  • ISBN: 9781409019572
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 208

About the author

Paul Micou

Paul Micou is the author of several novels including, The Music Programme, The Cover Artist, The Death of David Debrizzi, Rotten Times and The Last Word, all of which are published by Black Swan. After graduating from Harvard in 1981, he lived in Paris; he has lived in London since 1988.

Praise for Confessions of a Map Dealer

A farcical comedy of errors...there's a lot to enjoy.

Metro

Micou is a master of comic characterisation and his writing style is often reminiscent of a young Graham Greene.

The Times