Kaleidoscope by J. Robert Janes is my submission for the Crime Fiction Alphabet at
Mysteries in Paradise this week. Please visit
the post at Mysteries in Paradise to check out other entries for the letter J.

Janes is a Canadian writer of crime fiction and children's books.
Per MysteriousPress.com, publisher of his latest books:
J. Robert Janes (b. 1935) is a mystery author best
known for writing historical thrillers. Born in Toronto, he holds
degrees in mining and geology, and worked as an engineer, university
professor, and textbook author before he began writing fiction. ... In 1992, Janes published Mayhem, the first in the
long-running St-Cyr and Kohler series for which he is best known. These
police procedurals set in Nazi-occupied France have been praised for the
author’s attention to historical detail, as well as their swift-moving
plots. Bellringer is the thirteenth in the series.
The Story
The book is set in Occupied France, in December of 1942. It is the story of two men who are on opposite sides but must work together. Gestapo Haupsturmführer Hermann Kohler and his partner, Sûreté Chief Inspector Jean-Louis St-Cyr have been thrown together by circumstances to investigate crimes. They have developed a trusting relationship, but know that due to the realities of war, it will probably not end well. One side or the other will be the victor, and then where will their loyalties lie?
The two detectives are sent from Paris to a small village in Provence to investigate the death of a woman who is still lying on the hillside when they arrive. She has been shot with an arrow from a crossbow, thus limiting the suspects to those who can shoot with that weapon accurately. The victim turns out to be Anne-Marie Buemondi, who lives in Cannes but has come to the area to visit her daughter, who has health problems. The plot gets complicated very quickly, with suspicions that the death is related in some way to the activities of the maquis, the French Resistance.
My Take
I enjoyed the book, but I was confused by the narrative and the jerkiness of the plot as I read at least the first half of the book. There were references to past events and other characters that I did not understand. It turns out that Jean-Louis is having trouble remembering the details of a traumatic event that occurred several years earlier, which explains the choppiness of the segments, but reading it was still confusing.

Having read the first two books in the series (several years ago), I had some knowledge of the background of the story, yet this did not help too much. The relationships the detectives have with others (family, superiors) are covered pretty sketchily in this book, compared to the previous two, to give more time to the story, which was fine with me but might seem strange if you haven't read any earlier books. This is not spy fiction, but in some ways it reads like spy fiction. With the French authorities working with the occupiers, there is always distrust and no one ever knows who is on what side.
I have read reviews by others who had similar concerns re the complexity
of the plot and narrative, yet most seem to find the series rewarding. It
has a lot to offer. If you read this series, I suggest starting with
the first book, which does explain the setup. Hopping around to different
books in the series after that may not make that much difference.
In summary, this is an interesting and informative book about a time in history that
I keep coming back to in my mystery (and non-fiction) reading. I have four more in the series in my TBR stacks, and plan to keep reading through the series. I hope to read the next one soon in order to be able to make comparisons.
What Others Say:
Mayhem, the first book in the series, was
featured at The Rap Sheet as a "Book You Have to Read." Here is is what Cara Black, author of the
Aimée Leduc series set in modern-day Paris, France, says in that post:
It’s impossible to praise too highly the subtle ways in which author
Janes shows the twisted times of World War II in Europe through the
stories of his two policemen, both of whom are suffering in their
private lives.
J. Kingston Pierce comments at The Rap Sheet on
Salamander, the fourth book in the series:
Amazingly, those onetime enemies had not only been getting along since their first adventure in Mayhem (aka Mirage),
published in 1992, but had become a rather crack team of crime
solvers--often to the disgruntlement of their Gestapo superiors in
Paris, who see them as far too independent. While war storms across the
face of Europe, it’s up to St-Cyr and Kohler to solve the more everyday
but nonetheless disturbing crimes--the assaults, the thefts, the
occasional cross-bow killings. Misdeeds outside the scope of
state-sanctioned battle.
Additional Tidbits:
Carousel, the second book in the series, is another complex story of three connected murders that St-Cyr and Kohler are charged with solving. I am including an image of the cover for the Soho edition. I like this style of Soho covers in general, and this one is particularly nice.
A fourteenth St-Cyr and Kohler Investigation,
Tapestry, has just been published on June 4th, 2013. It and
Bellringer are available as eBooks or in paperback.
Janes also recently published a non-series novel,
The Hunting Ground, set in Europe in the years immediately after World War II.
This is my thirteenth and final book for the
Canadian Book Challenge 6.