I only finished this book because I was on a backpacking trip and had limited reading material. I really wanted to like it: the author had won the Golden Dagger Award (of which I was heretofore unaware). It's set in Naples, the city of my forbears. It's one of a series of books featuring police bigshot Aurelio Zen. (An Italian named Zen -- I guess it's not unusual for authors to invent names that make their protagonist stand out from the crowd.) So if it's a series, *someone* must think it's pretty good.
That someone is not me.
The chapters each have titles ...in Italian. Sure, the translations are in the first pages of the book, but why the affectation? In an ending note, we find out that the phrases come from the opera Cosi Fan Tutti...ahhh, now I understand! Except that it also states that "cosi fan tutti" doesn't easily translate to English. So, then why go that way, author Dibdin? Enigmatic for the sake of being enigmatic?
The story is convoluted. I won't give spoilers, but the many, many different threads are forced to come together because the book has to end somehow, I suppose. Let's see if I can remember some of them: (1) There's the murder of an American serviceman (or not) whose solution is very, VERY important. (2) There's the stolen new video game, worth gazillion$. (3) There are the sisters who are engaged to gangsters, and Zen is concerned about this (why?). (4) There are the missing mafia and political guys, and that solution is very, VERY important. (5) There is the theft of Zen's wallet, which introduces a mind-reader. (6) Wouldn't you know it, there is some super-secret, super-powerful independent Italian police force *also* operating in Naples. I'm sure I missed something.
The setting is in a crime-full city with mafia and political bosses pulling the strings of every little event in the town. Yet a taxi driver can distribute photos of a suspect, and make inquiries...but he doesn't end up swimming with the fishes? If there is any imaginable problem, Zen goes to the taxi driver to fix it -- this driver is a magician, and thank God he gave Zen a locater device just in case Zen should go missing. . The mom goes missing, yet Zen gives this barely a thought? (I don't think this is a spoiler) One of a pair of prostitutes is a transvestite, but nobody know s this, evidently including her partner, until the very end of the book? There are garbage men running very big orange trucks around the city well after the Neapolitan workday ends, but nobody -- nobody! -- notices this incongruity?
Nah, this book is a terrible mystery, and I won't be reading this author again.