<b>Mario Giordano - a Bavarian of Sicilian parentage who writes in German - has created a delightful detective and a lively, humorous portrait of Sicilian society and gastronomy</b>

The Times, Book of the Month

<b>Mario Giordano - a Bavarian of Sicilian parentage who writes in German - has created a delightful detective and a lively, humorous portrait of Sicilian society and gastronomy</b>

The Times, Book of the Month

<b>Giordano is a novelist of high skill and originality with an eye for eccentric comedy, idiosyncratic characters and vivid scenes. John Brownjohn's translation is stylish and this book is a masterly treat</b>

Times Literary Supplement

Se alle

<b>Giordano is a novelist of high skill and originality with an eye for eccentric comedy, idiosyncratic characters and vivid scenes. John Brownjohn's translation is stylish and this book is a masterly treat</b>

Times Literary Supplement

<b>Wonderfully evocative . . . a joyful light read</b>

Crime Review

<b>Wonderfully evocative . . . a joyful light read</b>

Crime Review

<b>The whole book is alive with a tang of lemons to set the senses zinging. Refreshing</b>

The Spectator

<b>The whole book is alive with a tang of lemons to set the senses zinging. Refreshing</b>

The Spectator

<b>The most enchanting novel I've read in ages! <i>Auntie Poldi and the Sicilian Lions</i> is a lush, sexy, and slightly madcap romp, much like Auntie Poldi herself. She's the aunt your mother warned you about - the one who never turns down a drink or a date with a dashing stranger, never mind the consequences . . . Mario Giordano has a gift for eccentric storytelling, snappy dialogue, and sly wit, making this a tart and delectable treat that you'll press on all your friends. I can't wait for the next installment!</b>

Amy Stewart

<b>The most enchanting novel I've read in ages! <i>Auntie Poldi and the Sicilian Lions</i> is a lush, sexy, and slightly madcap romp, much like Auntie Poldi herself. She's the aunt your mother warned you about - the one who never turns down a drink or a date with a dashing stranger, never mind the consequences . . . Mario Giordano has a gift for eccentric storytelling, snappy dialogue, and sly wit, making this a tart and delectable treat that you'll press on all your friends. I can't wait for the next installment!</b>

Amy Stewart

<b>Cross Alexander McCall Smith with Janet Evanovich, add a sensuously imagined Sicilian setting and an exuberant narrator, and you get the feel of Mario Giordano's Auntie Poldi detective books</b>

The Times

<b>Cross Alexander McCall Smith with Janet Evanovich, add a sensuously imagined Sicilian setting and an exuberant narrator, and you get the feel of Mario Giordano's Auntie Poldi detective books</b>

The Times

'Alive with a tang of lemons to set the senses zinging' The Spectator

Fiction at its most charming - A Man Called Ove meets Andrea Camilleri, Auntie Poldi is this summer's most unlikely hero.

Auntie Poldi can think of no finer place to wait for death than Sicily. All she asks is a sea view, fine wine (and plenty of it), and her family close around.

When death instead takes her handsome young friend Valentino - and under mysterious circumstances at that - Poldi will not take it lying down.

Perhaps it's in her blood (her father was a detective chief inspector); perhaps it's a diverting excuse to spend more time with men in uniform; or perhaps it's just the promise she makes to Valentino while holding his poor dead hand.

But Auntie Poldi's hunting instincts have never felt more alive. Justice must be served - if it's the last thing she does . . .

Auntie Poldi and the Fruits of the Lord, the second Auntie Poldi adventure, is out now!

Les mer
The perfect summer read set on the Mediterranean island of Sicily - perfect for fans of Alexander McCall Smith and <i>Inspector Montalbano.</i>
Mario Giordano - a Bavarian of Sicilian parentage who writes in German - has created a delightful detective and a lively, humorous portrait of Sicilian society and gastronomy - The Times, Book of the Month

Wonderfully evocative . . . a joyful light read - Crime Review

Italo Calvino declared that profound art doesn't need to be weighty; it can also enjoy the virtues of lightness. Mario Giordano's Auntie Poldi and the Sicilian Lions attempts a balance of the two impulses, not always successfully, but always with panache and vigour . . . the whole book is alive with a tang of lemons to set the senses zinging. Refreshing - The Spectator

Giordano is a novelist of high skill and originality with an eye for eccentric comedy, idiosyncratic characters and vivid scenes. John Brownjohn's translation is stylish and this book is a masterly treat - Times Literary Supplement
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781473655195
Publisert
2017-06-01
Utgiver
Vendor
John Murray Publishers Ltd
Vekt
234 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
131 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
336

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Mario Giordano, the son of Italian immigrants, was born in Munich in 1963 and studied psychology at the University of Dusseldorf. He writes novels, books for adolescents, and screenplays. He lives in Cologne. Auntie Poldi and the Sicilian Lions is his first crime novel.