Lost Girls of Rome is a complicated mystery with several subplots and several story arcs. Even though both Marcus and Sandra Vega are both trying to solve the disappearance of Lara, they are each separately conducting additional investigations.
A serial killer has been targeting Roman women. A rogue within a rogue organization has betrayed the Penitenzieri by giving victims access to the Penitenzieri files. Victims are beginning to exact vigilante justice. A strange killer, a transformist, steals the identity of victims before killing again. An Interpol agent who has been helping Sandra may not be who he claims to be.
The central mystery, and the most intriguing one, is who is Marcus. Since Marcus has amnesia, he cannot remember his faith or what happened in a Prague hotel room while on assignment.
Carrisi has created an intriguing set of interlocking mysteries that will keep readers guessing. Though there are several time shifts, and though the plot is complicated, everything is resolved at a satisfying break-neck speed. Carrisi's novel is not to be missed.
continued from Lost Girls of Rome--Part 1
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
The Small Hand by Susan Hill
On his way back from a client on the coast, Andrew Snow, a rare book dealer, cuts through the Downs and has an odd experience. After leaving the main road, he gets lost and finds himself inexplicably stopping at a dilapidated mansion. On The White House grounds, he feels the presence of a small hand gripping his own but yet there's no visible child. Is this a ghost or is he going mad like his brother, Hugo? Why do the gardens and pool fascinate him? Why does it all seem so achingly familiar?
Susan Hill (The Woman in Black) does a masterful job of creating tension and suspense in the marvelous ghost story. Hill is particularly good and creating psychological portraits that ring true. Infused with the supernatural, this novelette also revels how skillfully we deceive ourselves as adults. Grown-ups falsely believe their past is past--that their childhood fears and offenses are long buried.
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Review of Lost Girls of Rome by Donato Carrisi
Don't miss Donato Carrisi's novel, Lost Girls of Rome.
David's bags are in the storeroom at Headquarters. Vega found them too painful to look at. After she gets a call from an Interpol agent, however, she becomes alarmed.
Searching through his bags, at last, she finds his diary, a two-way radio, and
photographs on his favorite camera, a Leica. The camera has photographs of the
construction site (where David died) a detail from a Caravaggio painting, and a picture of a man with a scar on his temple.
Vega finds more items at the construction site, including a recording device, which convinces her that her beloved David was murdered.
Did the man with the scar murder her husband?
Martyrdom of St Matthew Source: Wikipedia |
Vega finds more items at the construction site, including a recording device, which convinces her that her beloved David was murdered.
Did the man with the scar murder her husband?
The scar is the result of a gunshot wound to the head and it has left the mysterious man, Marcus, with amnesia. Clemente, head of a secret investigative unit, wants him to solve a case, the disappearance of architecture student Lara. (continued)
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