Monday, January 2, 2012
Clash of Civilizations over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio
In this second novel by Amara Lakous, an Algerian now living in Italy, a dozen denizens of Piazza Vittorio in Rome weigh in on whether or not Amadeo, believed by almost everyone to be a native Italian but actually an immigrant from Algiers who speaks Italian better than the Italians and knows the streets and byways of Rome better than an Italian taxidriver, really murdered the crude and offensive Lorenzo Manfredini, known as The Gladiator. The foundation of the novel is the universal plight of immigrants, but the Italians even distrust and dislike other Italians from different parts of the country. The voices are wonderful - sharp, humorous, arrogant, wacky - the characters are lively and the unfolding resolution of the murder mystery is unexpected and interesting. This was easy and pleasurable to read, but also thought-provoking and sad. Very highly recommended!
Labels:
Amara Lakous,
crime,
criminal justice,
Dad,
fiction,
humor,
immigrant,
Italy,
light reading,
murder,
whodunit
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the cover of this book makes me want to read it.
ReplyDeleteI felt the same way! I'll send it to you.
ReplyDeleteOn reflection, in this case it worked, but often, I think, book covers are created by very talented artists who way outstrip their subject!!
ReplyDeletehaha, sometimes the opposite phenomenon occurs in genre fiction:
ReplyDeletehttp://libcom.org/files/images/library/dispossessed.jpg
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ReplyDeleteI finally got a chance to look at the picture: ha ha ha ha ha. Really made me laugh!
ReplyDelete