End Games (Aurelio Zen Mystery)

by Michael Dibdin

Paperback, 2008

Status

Available

Description

The dead man followed the track until it rose above the last remaining trees and ceased to be a rough line of beaten earth and scruffy grass, to become a stony ramp hewn out of the cliff face and deeply rutted by the abrasive force of ancient iron-rimmed cart wheels. By now il morto was clearly suffering, but he struggled on, pausing frequently to gasp for breath before tackling another stretch of the scorched rock on which the soles of his feet left bloody footprints. Aurelio Zen's final case brings him to remote town of Calabria, at the toe of Italy's boot, on what is supposed to be a routine assignment: the death of a scout for an American film company. But the case is complicated by a group of dangerous strangers who have arrived to uncover another local mystery - buried treasure - and who will stop at nothing to achieve their goal. The case rapidly spirals out of control, and Zen must penetrate the code of silence in the tight-knit community in order to solve the crime. If you enjoyed the Inspector Zen Mystery series you may also like The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, another crime novel by Michael Dibdin.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member mojacobs
The last Aurelio Zen, and thoroughly enjoyable. Kidnappings, murders, silly Americans, criminal Europeans, and omerta, set in Calabria, where Zen has been sent as a temporary chief.
LibraryThing member kerns222
One of Dibdin's best. His images of Sicily and its people make me wonder if Dibdin pushes them too far over the edge (descriptively), the way he does with the californian rich dude. And it is true, some countries do live the subjunctive as the fixer character points out. The important thing for us
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readers is Dibdin can write. Also (semi-spoiler) it is seldom in italian crime books that the bad guys get it, but here they do. Because of this, the police have to force the detective, Mr. Zen, to retire for solving the case.
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LibraryThing member leslie.98
An interesting plot but there were several aspects of the book that rubbed me the wrong way (which sadly made this an unsatisfactory book to end the series on for me). Firstly, there were no chapters though the text had clear breaks both in the layout & the point of view which seemed like natural
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places for them. Not a big deal but earlier books in the series did have chapters so it struck me as weird that this one didn't.

Secondly, the American mentioned in the blurb above was unbelievable to me - so overdrawn as to be a caricature! There were actually several American characters who were all unappealing (and imo, amazingly stupid) :(
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Awards

Hammett Prize (Nominee — 2007)
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