Plavi križ

Plavi križ

Gilbert K. Chesterton

Police Inspector Valentin follows the brilliant thief Flambeau to London. The small, unassuming priest Father Brown carries the valuable Blue Cross. Instead of being a victim, Brown leaves a series of absurd clues and cunningly outwits the criminal.

The Blue Cross (1910) is the first story by Gilbert Keith Chesterton to feature his most famous character, Father Brown. It was published in the collection The Innocence of Father Brown and is considered one of the masterpieces of the detective genre with deep philosophical and theological undertones.

The story begins with Aristide Valentin, the chief of the Paris police and a famous detective, arriving in England. Valentin is in pursuit of Hercule Flambeau, a brilliant and physically imposing French thief who has fled to London. Flambeau specializes in stealing valuable church objects. Valentin knows that the thief will likely target a Eucharistic Congress in London.

On the way, Valentin meets two priests: a small, unassuming Father Brown from Essex and a tall, elegant priest. Father Brown naively mentions that he carries a silver cross studded with sapphires – the famous Blue Cross. Valentine soon realizes that the little priest is the target, but he does not know that Flambeau has already taken on the role of another priest.

Rather than being deceived, Father Brown intuitively senses the threat. He leaves a series of bizarre, seemingly meaningless clues along the way: soup spilled on the wall, a broken window, an overturned fruit stand, salt in the sugar, and the like. These irrational incidents attract Valentine's attention because, as a rational detective, he seeks precisely that which is out of the ordinary.

Chesterton masterfully inverts the expectations of the detective genre. While Valentine follows logic and clues, the true detective genius is the humble Catholic priest. Father Brown uses not only reason, but also a deep knowledge of human nature acquired in the confessional. He understands sin and evil better than professional detectives because he listens to human weaknesses every day.

Finally, on Hampstead Heath, a dramatic showdown occurs. Father Brown has already replaced the cross and sent him to safety, and Flambeau is caught thanks to his own clues. In the final conversation, Brown explains how he outwitted the thief - by understanding that a criminal cannot escape reason and the moral order of the world.

The story is rich in paradoxes, typical of Chesterton. It criticizes dry rationalism (Valentine), and celebrates the irrational wisdom of faith and the common man. Humor, sharp irony and unexpected twists make it entertaining, but also profound - the theme is the conflict of appearance and reality, reason and faith, humility and arrogance.

The Blue Cross is a model of intelligent detective fiction that goes far beyond the genre. It introduced Father Brown as the antipode of Sherlock Holmes: a small, unremarkable, but spiritually and intellectually superior priest who solves puzzles with heart and faith as much as his brain. The story remains fresh today, and Chesterton's style – witty, paradoxical, and humane – makes it a true little masterpiece.

Original title
The Blue Cross
Translation
Juraj Bubalo
Editor
Ivica Buljan
Graphics design
Antonija Radić Horvat
Dimensions
15 x 9 cm
Pages
40
Publisher
Europapress holding, Zagreb, 2009.
 
Latin alphabet. Paperback.
Language: Croatian.

Multiple copies are available

Copy number 1

Condition:Unused

Copy number 2

Condition:Unused

Copy number 3

Condition:Used, excellent condition
 

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