The Dominici Affair: Murder and Mystery in Provence

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Dominici Affair: Murder and Mystery in Provence
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Martin Kitchen
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:344
Dimensions(mm): Height 228,Width 152
Category/GenreTrue Crime
ISBN/Barcode 9781612349459
ClassificationsDewey:364.15230944
Audience
General
Illustrations 14 photographs, 2 illustrations

Publishing Details

Publisher Potomac Books Inc
Imprint Potomac Books Inc
Publication Date 28 January 2017
Publication Country United States

Description

In August 1952, the distinguished British scientist Sir Jack Drummond, alongside his wife, Lady Ann, and their ten-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, was brutally murdered on a roadside in rural France. Sir Jack, a well-known nutritionist who modernized the classification of vitamins and helped devise UK rationing in World War II, was on holiday with his family in the French Riviera when they stopped to make camp just off the road near a farm called La Grand'Terre in Provence. The family was found murdered the following morning. Gaston Dominici, the illiterate, seventy-five-year-old patriarch of the nearby La Grand'Terre was accused, convicted, and condemned to death by guillotine soon after. When Dominici was first convicted there was general agreement that the ignorant, pitiless, and depraved old peasant had gotten what he deserved. At the time, Dominici stood for everything backwards and brutish about a peasantry left behind in the wake of France's post-war transformation and burgeoning prosperity. But with time perspectives changed. Subsequent enquiries coupled with widespread doubts and misgivings prompted President de Gaulle to order his release from prison in 1960, and by the 1980s many in France came to believe--against all evidence--that Gaston Dominici was innocent. He had become a romanticized symbol of a simpler, genuine, and somehow more honest life from a bygone era. Reconstructing the facts of the case and setting it against broader social, economic, and historical currents in post-war France, The Dominici Affair sheds light on one of the most puzzling and notorious crimes of 20th Century France, illuminating an entire Rorschach of social dynamics in the country.

Author Biography

Michael Kitchen is a historian and the author of numerous books on European history. His most recent titles include Speer: Hitler's Architect (Yale, 2015) and Rommel's Desert War: Waging World War II in North Africa (Cambridge, 2009).

Reviews

"Martin Kitchen's meticulous reconstruction of the twists and turns of the Dominici affair, the most sensational murder mystery in 1950s France, is likely to stand as the definitive account of the case. Readers will enjoy not only the story itself but the light this lurid drama casts on life in a remote corner of France and on the ambiguous status, in national life and imagination, of postwar France's archaic peasant communities."--Sarah Maza, author of Violette Nozi?re: A Story of Murder in 1930s Paris --Sarah Maza (02/27/2017) "An engrossing investigation of the multiple murder of three English tourists in the French countryside in the 1950s. Martin Kitchen recreates the tangled threads of what was a famous case in its time. Fascinating!"--Thomas Hoobler, coauthor of The Crimes of Paris --Thomas Hoobler (02/27/2017)