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Blood Curse
Blood Curse: The Springtime of Commissario Ricciardi | Maurizio de Giovanni
2 posts | 6 read | 2 to read
Ricciardi has visions. He sees and hears the final seconds in the lives of victims of violent deaths. It is both a gift and a curse. It has helped him become one of the most acute and successful homicide detectives in the Naples police force. But all that horror and suffering has hollowed him out emotionally. He drinks and doesn’t sleep. Other than his loyal partner Brigadier Maione he has no friends. Naples, 1931. In a working class apartment in the Sanita’ neighborhood an elderly woman by the name of Carmela Calise has been beaten to death. When Ricciardi and Maione arrive at the scene they start asking the neighbors questions. No one wants to talk but slowly a few interesting facts slip out. Carmela Calise was moonlighting as a fortuneteller and moneylender. In her decrepit apartment she would receive clients, among them some of the city’s rich and powerful, predicting their futures in such a way as to manipulate and deceive. If economic ruin lurked in their futures, Calise was happy to help. For a price, of course. She had many enemies, those indebted to her, manipulated by her lies, disappointed by her prophesies or destroyed by her machinations. Murder suspects in this atmospheric thriller abound and Commissario Ricciardi, one of the most original and intriguing investigators in contemporary crime fiction, will have his work cut out for him.
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charl08

I love the 1920s cover of this one...

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BooksCatsMaine
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Pickpick

Freezing cold and lots of snow outside, perfect opportunity to finish this book with a cup of tea and a blanket.

Blood Curse is a lyrically written and gently twisting, typically Italian detective story, about a very brutal murder. The prose was far more elegant than I was expecting, and the story flits between characters every few paragraphs, to represent the bustle of Naples...

An excellent read! Highly recommended.

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