Jean-Mi masters his sales pitch and works on the client recommendation to refourguer his illustrated Bible: "[] beautiful bound volumes, illustrations that make the sacred text more lively and concrete." Not always psychologist, Jean-Mi commits the fatal mistake of treating Raymond, a potential client, remained patented. Introduced in the home of Raymond, Jean-Mi notices the complex mechanism that seems to protect a fabulous treasure chest dautant that it remains invisible. Therefore, as frightened quattiré, Jean-Mi na more quune idea noggin, make hand-low on good fortune, that of lémancipation and love for money by Jean-Mi is still single in his smoker and fulmineuse mom.
Incredible and comical spite of themselves, the characters of the novel by Jean-Paul Demure hold attention but does not captivate. This probably depends on the weakness of the motivations and psychology of each little searched protagonist. Gorilla Raymond could pull the blanket to them by engaging in a last stand of honor foldinguerie if not watched at every turn. The police have raw sad rinds, bacon heads ruddy insubstantial post giscardienne era. They clash and make task today but no one grew out of this improvised clumsiness. The reader is far from lextraordinaire "hunting End" by the same author, upsetting, deep, arranged like a Greek tragedy. He still has to go up the seam of the oeuvre of a discreet and talented French author.