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Cosi Fan Tutti by Michael Dibdin
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Cosi Fan Tutti (original 1996; edition 1996)

by Michael Dibdin

Series: Aurelio Zen (5)

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6572035,289 (3.63)13
An Aurelio Zen Novel Michael Dibdin's overburdened Italian police inspector has been transferred to Naples, where the rule of law is so lax that a police station may double as a brothel. But this time, having alienated superiors with his impolitic zealousness in every previous posting, Zen is determined not to make waves. Too bad an American sailor (who may be neither American nor a sailor) knifes one of his opposite numbers in Naples's harbor, and some local garbage collectors have taken to moonlighting in homicide. And when Zen becomes embroiled in a romantic intrigue involving love-sick gangsters and prostitutes who pass themselves off as Albanian refugees, all Naples comes to resemble the set of the Mozart opera of the same title. Bawdy, suspenseful, and splendidly farcical, the result is an irresistible offering from a maestro of mystery. "From the Trade Paperback edition."… (more)
Member:bloomsburybooks
Title:Cosi Fan Tutti
Authors:Michael Dibdin
Info:Faber & Faber (1996), Paperback
Collections:French
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Così Fan Tutti by Michael Dibdin (1996)

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English (18)  Spanish (1)  Dutch (1)  All languages (20)
Showing 1-5 of 18 (next | show all)
Aurelio Zen is a cop who stumbles into a crime and solves it. He has been transferred from Rome to Naples and turns a blind eye to everything but he manages to get people on his side. He also is helping a mother save her two daughters from their lowlife boyfriends. That works as well as his crime solving skills.

I enjoyed this book. I chuckled throughout it as Zen ineptly does his job but manages to come out right. I liked the supporting characters. Humor is used well in this book. I will be reading more of Aurelio Zen. ( )
  Sheila1957 | Sep 20, 2019 |
Zen is in Naples in this entry of the series & despite his best efforts to remain uninvolved, he manages to get in the middle of a case involving organized crime. And the personal revelation at the end is wonderful! ( )
  leslie.98 | Sep 2, 2019 |
Zen is exiled to Naples and hopes to lounge through his posting until he can retire. But he is caught up in personal and professional mysteries and crimes. One of the subplots is based on the Mozart opera (hence the name), and this is a more lighthearted and comic installment than some of the others. Very enjoyable. ( )
  Sunita_p | May 18, 2019 |
A Wikipedia review called the Aurelio Zen series dark. Oddly, I find him hilariously funny and, in this particular novel, Shakespearean, especially in the conclusion, which feels as if it were the libretto of an opera. I so enjoyed it.
(later: how embarrassing! from other reviews I discover the plot is indeed based on the opera by the same name, and so no wonder the ending felt like a libretto! It was one!) ( )
  MaryHeleneMele | May 6, 2019 |
I nearly put this book down halfway through. It seemed as if there too many characters to keep track of and the plot was tangled, confusing, and only rarely the tiniest bit funny. Not what I expected at all. But the finale was truly worth it all! I promise, everything does end up making sense and when everything is revealed it is pretty darn hilarious. ( )
  aurelas | Dec 23, 2016 |
Showing 1-5 of 18 (next | show all)
 Aurelio Zen (Dead Lagoon, 1995, etc.) has bailed out of the Rome Questura one jump ahead of a hardship posting, preempting his inevitable exile by requesting assignment to the port detachment at Naples, which seems like a sleepy enough place for him to bide his time till his fortunes improve. In order to do a favor for a new acquaintance, the widow Valeria Squillace, and to enliven his new posting, he arranges for her marriageable daughters, Orestina and Filomena, to be whisked off to London while he dangles a pair of eager prostitutes under the noses of their highly unsuitable suitors, Gesualdo Troise and Sabatino Capuozzo (whence the Mozartean title). Little does Zen realize how deeply implicated Gesualdo and Sabatino are in a rash of assassinations engineered by the Strade Pulite (Clean Streets), an enterprising group of terrorists disguised as garbage men. For that matter, he has no idea that the American ensign his men are holding in jail for assault--a man who's neither American nor an ensign--has uncomfortably close ties to the Strade Pulite as well. The background is sinister, and there's a substantial body count, but the tone is brightly farcical, even before Zen's stolen police identification becomes a deliciously absurd red herring. As in the best farces, practically everybody, including Zen, turns out to be in disguise--though the outrageous variety of masquerades ranges far beyond anything Mozart ever thought of.
added by VivienneR | editKirkus Reviews
 
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Epigraph
Ah, chi mai fra tanti mali
chi mai può la vita amar?
-- Lorenzo Da Ponte, Così fan tutte
Dedication
For Kathrine, fedel quanto bella
First words
If there had been anyone about in Via Greco on the morning in question, this is what they would have seen.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Wikipedia in English (2)

An Aurelio Zen Novel Michael Dibdin's overburdened Italian police inspector has been transferred to Naples, where the rule of law is so lax that a police station may double as a brothel. But this time, having alienated superiors with his impolitic zealousness in every previous posting, Zen is determined not to make waves. Too bad an American sailor (who may be neither American nor a sailor) knifes one of his opposite numbers in Naples's harbor, and some local garbage collectors have taken to moonlighting in homicide. And when Zen becomes embroiled in a romantic intrigue involving love-sick gangsters and prostitutes who pass themselves off as Albanian refugees, all Naples comes to resemble the set of the Mozart opera of the same title. Bawdy, suspenseful, and splendidly farcical, the result is an irresistible offering from a maestro of mystery. "From the Trade Paperback edition."

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