Críticas:
Winner of the Scerbanenco Prize
"Gripping" ""The Sun"""
"Gripping." ""The Sun"""
"Gripping." The Sun"
"Costantini takes his time skillfully planting the twisty, deep-lying roots of his narrative. Elegant prose and a diabolical plot (including some devilish misdirection) should captivate even readers new to the Balistreri chronicles."--Publishers Weekly
"Convincingly reimagines the lavish, self-indulgent lifestyle of the ex-patriot Italians in the 60s and 70s and the secret negotiations that led to the rise to power of Gaddafi . . . intriguing and complex."-- The Sydney Morning Herald
"A state-of-the-nation piece ... it bristles with the same effortless authority."--Barry Forshaw, Good Book Guide
"Gripping."--The Sun
"This is a take-no-prisoners view of a corrupt society and a guide on what it takes to survive and prosper. The detail of the police procedural is brilliantly managed and, as we get closer to the end, the thriller wattage increases with increasingly desperate police officers chasing their tails."--San Francisco Book Review, on The Deliverance of Evil
"[A] commanding debut thriller . . . Costantini spins a politically charged, Machiavellian tale of fiendish complexity."--Publishers Weekly, on The Deliverance of Evil
Reseña del editor:
In the 1960s, post-colonial Libya fell prey to the sprawling industrial greed of the West, driven by the discovery of oil. While the modern quarter of Tripoli, built by the Italians, was small and affluent, the rest of the city--like the rest of the nation--was left to fend for itself amid the arid, sandy stretches of North Africa. As tensions mounted between eastern and western ideals, terror began to supplant justice, and acts of religiously motivated violence began to fill some of Tripoli's darkest corners.
Against this backdrop, the teenaged Michele Balistreri--a smart young man plagued by thuggish tendencies and a youthful attraction to Fascism--suffered a succession of personal blows that would scar him for life: the death of his mother; a terrible tragedy that befell his best friend's family; and the consequences of his father's role in Gaddafi's rise to power. Worst of all, an innocent blood pact he made as a teenager would come to haunt him as an adult.
Four decades later, journalist Linda Nardi is hard at work investigating the shadowy history of the Vatican Bank's involvement in Libya when she suddenly finds her attention diverted to an irresistible story assignment: covering the collapse of Colonel Gaddafi's forty-two year dictatorship.
It is only a matter of time before Nardi's research and Balistreri's investigative work as a police commissario bring them into contact. Together they unearth a deadly conspiracy that goes to the top of Rome's power structure that neither of them will ever be able to forget.
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