Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great Wit--Great History!, August 24, 2002
I'd give this novel a 4.5 if I could. It isn't the top of the line as Falco stories go, but it's so far superior to most other historical mysteries that I hated to rate it less than 5. This is the novel that contains Davis's most waggish bit of BRITISH fun, on page 135 (paperback version): "It was a hundred years since Rome decided to civilize the Gauls;. . . I am prepared to concede that one day the three cold Gallic provinces will come up with a contribution to the civilised arts--but nobody is going to convince me that it will be mastery of cuisine." My best friend, married to a Frenchman who is an excellent home-kitchen chef, fell off her chair at that one, as I had done when I read it a few years earlier! And that's just one sample of Davis's mordant sense of "tweak." I demand to know why this book is out of print!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well plotted historical mystery with meaty characters..., May 29, 1996
By A Customer
I have read all of the Marcus Didius Falco mysteries and Venus In Copper is my favorite. Ancient Roman life is weaved around the characters delightfully giving a fine historical milieu. Falco is a salt-of-the-earth type of character with honour and nobility yet a certain baseness that we can all relate to. The characters are well thought out, the prose is witty, and the premise is interesting. The femme fatale quality of this book reminds one of Chandler. Highly Recommended!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Snakes Alive, September 25, 2006
This is the third novel in the mystery series featuring Marcus Didius Falco, an informer and sleuth. A series of books that have become hugely popular, so much so that the author is now at the forefront of historical mystery writers. It was probably a stroke of genius on her part to have novels that are extremely well researched and contain all the elements that would be and should be found in Rome in AD70, but to have a lead character who has the vocabulary of a present day New York cop. In this the third novel Falco is starting to feel like an old friend. Falco is trying to live down the indignity of being released from jail with the help of his mother of all people and he has accepted a case from some rich private clients. He is also in the middle of trying to entice his girlfriend Helena Justina to come and live with him, though why a senator's daughter, especially one who has just lost their baby, would wish to live in the hovel he calls home is anybody's guess. When the client Falco is supposedly protecting dies, he is immediately re-hired by none other than the chief suspect. The crux of the matter is that Falco must find and expose a woman, a fortune hunter, who has lost more husbands to accidents than it can be believed possible. Falco has more than a little excitement during the investigation, including a brush with a female contortionist who has a very interesting snake act. He also has the tremendous honour, or otherwise of a "friendly" visit from Titus Caesar himself, right in the middle of Falco attempting to cook a huge turbot without the aid of every chef's must have, a fish kettle.
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