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Cosi Fan Tutti - Aurelio Zen Mystery by Michael Dibdin Paperback
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Highlights
- An Aurelio Zen Novel Michael Dibdin's overburdened Italian police inspector has been transferred to Naples, where the rule of law is so lax that a police station may double as a brothel.
- About the Author: Michael Dibdin was born in England and raised in Northern Ireland.
- 256 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Mystery & Detective
- Series Name: Aurelio Zen Mystery
Description
About the Book
Overburdened Italian police inspector Aurelio Zen is transferred to Naples and is soon embroiled in a romantic intrigue involving love-sick gangsters and prostitutes, in this bawdy, suspenseful, and splendidly farcical offering by a maestro of mystery.
Book Synopsis
An Aurelio Zen Novel
Michael Dibdin's overburdened Italian police inspector has been transferred to Naples, where the rule of law is so lax that a police station may double as a brothel. But this time, having alienated superiors with his impolitic zealousness in every previous posting, Zen is determined not to make waves.
Too bad an American sailor (who may be neither American nor a sailor) knifes one of his opposite numbers in Naples's harbor, and some local garbage collectors have taken to moonlighting in homicide. And when Zen becomes embroiled in a romantic intrigue involving love-sick gangsters and prostitutes who pass themselves off as Albanian refugees, all Naples comes to resemble the set of the Mozart opera of the same title. Bawdy, suspenseful, and splendidly farcical, the result is an irresistible offering from a maestro of mystery.
About the Author
Michael Dibdin was born in England and raised in Northern Ireland. He attended Sussex University and the University of Alberta in Canada. He spent five years in Perugia, Italy, where he taught English at the local university. He went on to live in Oxford, England and Seattle, Washington. He was the author of eighteen novels, eleven of them in the popular Aurelio Zen series, including Ratking, which won the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger, and Cabal, which was awarded the French Grand Prix du Roman Policier. His work has been translated into eighteen languages. He died in 2007.