From Publishers Weekly
The ninth outing for Dibdin's Italian cop Aurelio Zen ranks right up there with such earlier triumphs in the series as Cabal and Dead Lagoon. The theft from the morgue of a partially mummified body, originally discovered in an abandoned military tunnel in the Italian Alps, aggravates the adversarial relationship between the Italian defense ministry and the Criminalpol, for whom Zen works under the interior ministry. When Zen gets on the case, the Caribinieri make it clear that they don't want the investigation to continue. Undeterred, Zen travels to the crime scene in the Dolomites. He quickly learns that the corpse's arm bore the tattoo of a Gorgon, a distinguishing mark of a covert 1970s paramilitary cell called Operation Medusa. Seeking other surviving members, Zen learns that one of the four was killed 25 years earlier in an airplane explosion, though no remains were recovered. Another is suddenly blown up by a car bomb. Of the two remaining members, one has strangely disappeared, and the last, now a top defense ministry agent, has strict orders to "clarify the situation" by any means necessary. As Zen races all over northern Italy in pursuit of justice, the Caribinieri take increasingly drastic measures to ensure that the dead stay buried, along with the truth. As always, Dibdin shows us in vivid, elegant prose the sociopolitical situation in Italy. The result is a slyly intelligent page-turner by a contemporary master of the form.
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From Booklist
Aurelio Zen, Dibdin's world-weary Italian police officer, finds that the more his country changes, the more cynical he becomes. Comfortable with negotiating traditional Italian corruption, Zen now must confront an even more insidious reality, which he calls
Italia Lite: "the new culture of empty slogans, insincere smiles, and hollow promises overlaying the authentic adversarial asperity of public life." In the series' ninth installment, that asperity reveals itself not long after Zen, now working out of the Interior Ministry, starts poking around the discovery of a body in the Italian Alps. All signs point to a secret cabal of military types who once planned to overthrow the government but now are attempting to cover their tracks. Unable, despite his cynicism, to walk away from an unturned stone, Zen keeps prodding, finding the truth but, as always, bringing little comfort either to himself or to the victims of the crimes he exposes. That irony is at the heart of Zen's worldview, and it is what drives this richly satisfying series, which has come to define the new European procedural.
Bill OttCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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