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  • The Bastards of Pizzofalcone

  • A Bastards of Pizzofalcone Book
  • Written by: Maurizio de Giovanni
  • Narrated by: Chris Kayser
  • Length: 10 hrs and 37 mins
  • 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)

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The Bastards of Pizzofalcone

Written by: Maurizio de Giovanni
Narrated by: Chris Kayser
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Publisher's Summary

The “engrossing” sequel to The Crocodile kicks off an Italian crime fiction series by the author of the bestselling Commissario Ricciardi novels. (Publishers Weekly)

They’ve made a fresh start at the Pizzofalcone precinct of Naples. They fired every member of the investigative branch after they were found guilty of corruption. Now, there’s a group of detectives, a new commissario, and a new superintendent. The new cops immediately find themselves investigating a high-profile murder that has the whole town on edge.

Heading the investigation is Inspector Lojacono, known as “the Chinaman", a cop with a checkered past who is currently riding a reputation as a crack investigator after having captured a serial killer known as “The Crocodile". Lojacono’s partner is Aragona, who wants to be known as “Serpico", but the name doesn’t stick. Luigi Palma, aka “Gigi,” is the commissario, Francesco Romano, known as “Hulk,” is the slightly self-deluded lieutenant. Lojacono, Aragona, Palma, and Romano are joined by a cast of cops portrayed by best-selling author Maurizio de Giovanni with depth and intimate knowledge of the close-knit world of police investigators. De Giovanni’s award-winning and best-selling novels, all set in Naples, offer a brilliant vision of the criminal underworld and the lives of the cops in Europe’s most fabled, atmospheric, dangerous, and lustful city.

“Colorful, fully drawn characters and several intriguing subplots help propel the plot to a satisfying resolution.”(Publishers Weekly)

“De Giovanni provides satisfyingly logical answers to every riddle.... Despite the Neapolitan setting, the crew of mismatched cops may remind you of similar teams in Sweden, New York, or Hollywood. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.”(Kirkus Reviews)

©2021 Maurizio de Giovanni (P)2021 Scribd Audio
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good

Listened to the audiobook at work tonight and I really enjoyed it, even though it ended without trying up quite a few loose ends.
It was interesting. I went in expecting the characters to be of the quirky underdog variety, but no, they really are bastards. Not all of them, I guess, but... one flagrant racist, one wife beater, a woman who hates her husband and child and decided just in time to not let her kid drown so that she could be "free." The other female character is defined by her daddy issues, her gayness and her participation in risky behaviors in her romantic life. But then, she's also a gun nut, so there's that. They all managed to come out just this side of one-dimensional, but it still kind of worked? The secondary characters were, by contrast, particularly well drawn. Their motivations and behaviors were realistic.
The mystery was a good one and it had me guessing right until the end. I didn't see the villain coming. The way it was written, it really sounded like it was someone else, but then... But it didn't feel like it was out of the blue, either, which is important.
It was solid, and the writing was very engaging.

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