The story of anti mafia magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, who were both gruesomely murdered by the mafia in 1992, and the subsequent hunt for the perpetrators.
It's pretty frustrating to read the story of such incredibly brave men who weren't just fighting organised crime, but also the failure of the Italian state to put in place the legal structures to be able to fight on a level playing field.
This book is really upsetting reading at times. It is hard to read of how Falcone knew the mafia would kill him, how he had resigned himself to being murdered, knowing that he was to be proved right, in the most vicious way.
The horrible, horrible savagery with which he was eventually killed is truly disturbing stuff to read. Once Falcone was dead, his close friend and colleague Borsellino knew he would be next, as the death of his friend, the number one target, pushed him up the list.
In the years following the assassinations, there was a marked increase in the number of 'pentiti' - mafia members agreeing to collaborate with the state.
Some of them said they'd made the decision to do so after seeing the widow of one of the bodyguards killed with Falcone speak at her husband's funeral about the circumstances under which she'd forgive them - “To the men of the mafia – who are here in this church too – I want to say something. Become Christians again. I ask you, for Palermo, a city you’ve turned into a city of blood. Men of the mafia, I will forgive you, but you will have to get down on your knees.”.
It was the evidence of these collaborators which led to the eventual conviction of those guilty of the murders.
As Falcone and Borsellino were killed, new, equally brave magistrates stepped forward to take their place. Follain quotes Pablo Neruda on this - "“you can cut all the flowers but you cannot keep Spring from coming" - but it's hard not to reflect that the same concept applies, albeit in a slightly different fashion, to Cosa Nostra, as many bosses and under bosses as may have been sent to prison in the following years, there's a sense that there were always more ready to step into their shoes.
A really engrossing, but disturbing book which brings home how such a small community can produce people so honest and good, yet also others so brutally evil.