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Ever since his punitive transfer to Lungariva, the sleepy village has quickly become the Cabot Cove of the Italian Riviera...This time, Deputy Assistant Chief of Police Luigi Berté has to investigate a double murder in the Grand Hotel Miramare, Lungariva's historic luxury hotel, playground for old nobility, international business tycoons, and polo players. But one of the guests is not what they seem and Berté has to work quickly before his suspects scatter to the four corners of the earth - with deadly results.Set in the very real Grand Hotel Miramare in the village of Santa Margherita Ligure, this novel features Luigi Berté, one of the best-known characters in modern Italian fiction.Appearing in a dozen murder mysteries and counting, Berté, a truly unique Italian creation, is beloved for his quirky approach to solving crimes, his kibitzing conscience, and his love for good food.Double Murder at the Grand Hotel Miramare is the first of Berté's adventures to be translated into English.
Addicted to prescription drugs by careless doctors and aggressive drug companies, Morfeo is dancing on the edge of disaster. A confrontation with his son forces him to face his addiction.
In this collection of 14 stories, Luigi Capuana tours the inner workings of the human mind. His characters, while often comic or absurd, always act in accordance with the iron logic of their manias, flaws and quirks. For Capuana, these short stories are psychological laboratories where his characters are placed in unusual situations and their reactions, psychology, and inner thoughts are meticulously observed. As Capuana's friend and fellow Verist, Giovanni Verga, put it, "What an unexplored and fruitful mine these short stories are, in which imagination and scientific research go hand in hand with such profound impact!"Delitto Ideale, originally published in Italy in 1902, is considered a classic in Europe but appeared in English for the first time in 2018 as Mind Games. This academic edition contains the original Italian and the English translation on facing pages.
Private investigator Bacci Pagano can't resist taking the bait when his new client dangles a check with too many zeros. He should have known that where there's bait, there's always a hook.
When the clerk arrived to unlock the bookstore, the last thing he expected to find inside was a dead Senator. . . Now Inspector De Vincenzi has been assigned the case and the only clue is a missing copy of a rare book, taken from the room where the Senator lies dead. As the bodies begin to pile up, supernatural forces seem to be at work.
From the founder of the modern Norwegian crime novel, a story that will keep you thrilled and mystified. It is an evening in early May when the quiet of Montrose Abbey is shattered by the sounds of shouting and broken glass. When the police arrive, they find the abbey library ransacked and bloodstained. Broken furniture and a burning carpet bear witness to a violent struggle. And the abbot himself, the scholarly Abbot Montrose, is missing. Only a torn fragment of his cassock remains, caught in the wrought-iron fence surrounding the abbey. The police, the press, and citizens of this northern city fear the worst. What could have befallen the missing abbot? Has he been murdered? Abducted? As world-renowned Detective Asbjørn Krag and his partner, Detective Sirius Keller, begin to unravel the tangled knot of clues left behind, they find themselves in the city's infamous Krydder District, "where the dark doorways are as close together as rat holes in an old warehouse." The more answers they find, the more questions seem to pop up.This well-constructed, evocative and witty mystery by Sven Elvestead, also known as Stein Riverton (for whom the Norwegian Riverton Prize was named), will keep you guessing until the very last page.Sven Elvestad, aka Stein Riverton, was born in Fredrikshald, Norway, in 1884. Author of over 90 books, he is acclaimed as the father of Norwegian crime fiction. Even today, the Riverton Prize is awarded annually to the best Norwegian crime story.
In these stories, Serao writes of love and romance as if she were Barbara Cartland's older, crankier -- and often much funnier -- sister. She turns standard romantic cliches upside down with sometimes tragic, sometimes comic, but always unexpected, results.
WARNING: MAY CAUSE NIGHTMARES. READ AT YOUR OWN RISK.Before there was The Twilight Zone there was Mind Games. This collection of 14 stories takes you on a roller coaster thrill ride through the unknown land where fantasy meets fact. What's real? What's not? You be the judge . . . If you can.Sometimes hilarious, often unsettling, you'll be thinking about Mind Games and its stories of ordinary people in incredible situations long after you've turned the final page. Mind Games, originally published in Italy as Delitto Ideale, is considered a classic and has been keeping people awake in Europe since 1902. This edition marks the first time it's been available in English. Get your copy today. And remember . . . We warned you.
Dagobert Trostler is the Sherlock Holmes of Vienna . . . with a twist. Unlike Holmes, he's a party animal. While he loves a good mystery, he also loves good food, good company and a good time.
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