Hunting Season

by Andrea Camilleri

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"From internationally bestselling author Andrea Camilleri, a brilliant, bawdy comedy that will surprise even the most die-hard Montalbano fans. In 1880s Vigàta, a stranger comes to town to open a pharmacy. Fofò turns out to be the son of a man legendary for having a magic garden stocked with plants, fruits, and vegetables that could cure any ailment-a man who was found murdered years ago. Fofò escaped, but now has reappeared looking to make his fortune and soon finds himself mixed up in show more the dealings of a philandering local marchese set on producing an heir. An absurd, quirky murder mystery that recalls the most hilarious and farcical scenes of Shakespeare and The Canterbury Tales, Hunting Season will introduce American readers to a refreshing new aspect of one of our best-loved writers. "-- show less

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10 reviews
Hunting Season: A Novel is a short novel by Andrea Camilleri, written in about 1990, before he conceived of his beloved Salvo Montalbano. Set in the fictional Sicilian town of Vigata in 1880, the story concerns the return of the son of the town pharmacist and what his arrival means for, primarily, the nobility of the region. Various prominent members of one aristocratic family start to die, by suicide, accident or illness, with resultant grief piled upon grief for the remaining family members, a grief that the pharmacist strives to mitigate. How successful he is forms the meat of the story, with numerous asides for other tales that might or might not be relevant.... This is a fun read for fans of Camilleri's work, because all of his show more trademark wit and sardonic humour are on full-grown display; but I have to admit the unrelenting nature of the absolute misogyny in the story made me grit my teeth on more than one occasion, and I'm still not sure if that was an intentional exaggeration of the extreme anti-female bias in 19th Century Sicily or if it was meant to be realistic. Incidentally, I "solved" the story long before the end, but that didn't diminish my overall enjoyment of reading it. So a bit of a mixed review from me: if you can glide over the blatant misogyny, it's an entertaining evening's read. show less
½
Milleottocento e non sentirlo

Sì... ambientazione ottocentesca ma potrebbe tranquillamente essere una storia di un anno fa come posticipata in un futuro prossimo. Io trovo quest'uomo capace come pochi di scavare ed esplorare e catalogare i vizi come le virtù, le passioni come i fatti di sangue, l'onore come "le corna" dell'umana specie senza annoiare pur nella ripetizione di umori ben noti. E lo fa con il conforto della lingua siciliana, che più sanguigna, più figurativa, più onomatopeica non può non essere, al pari di quella napoletana. E per quanto sia una suggestione, una elaborazione personalissima nata dalla lettura di una cronaca socio-politico-territoriale (vera) della Sicilia di quegli anni, non riesco a non farmi persuasa show more che una vicenda così possa essere accaduta veramente. Come nei migliori film francesi, che per 90' o più son capaci di legarti empaticamente ai destini dei personaggi, così Camilleri mi tiene per mano fra uno scanto e una risata, una lagrima e una camurrìa lasciandomi dopo neanche un centinaio di pagine più ricca di emozioni ma anche più sola. Come "solo" è il destino di ognuno di noi. show less
I love the works of Andrea Camilleri and have sought out the books after watching his beloved Montalbano series.

This one of the earlier stories set in Vigata in the 1880s. The arrival of a young man, Fofo, who father murdered many years before sets tongues a-wagging. He sets up a pharmacy and becomes entangled in the lives of the local nobility. When the deaths of one patriarch and his family soon become a talking point, the inspector is called in.

This is actually, despite the high body count - a love story.

"Have there recently been in violent crimes in your town?""
"No, with the exception of a pharamcist who killed seven people for love."
This historical mystery takes place in and around Vigàta, the stomping grounds 100 years later of Camilleri's delightful Inspector Montalbano. Alas, this story is slighter. Part sex farce, part satire of 1880s Sicilian life, the tale begins when a mysterious stranger comes to town and sets up as a pharmacist. Soon members of a philandering marchese's family start dying, and for a long time this appears to be just a string of bad luck as they all apparently die of natural causes. In fact, the reader only finds out what really happened when the murderer voluntarily confesses. Perhaps this is also a satire of Sicilian vengeance. Moderately entertaining, but not up to the Montalbanos.
"La stagione della caccia" è un giallo storico (siamo nella Sicilia di fine '800) decisamente "sui generis": piacevole ed ironico (si ride proprio dei morti, e delle loro morti, che incontreremo strada facendo nella lettura).
La particolarità di questo romanzo breve è il suo essere corale: siamo in una Vigata, la futura location delle indagini di Montalbano, piena zeppa di tanti personaggi (uno più simpatico dell'altro... anche quelli un po' antipatici!), con Alfonso "Fofò" La Matina che assurge a personaggio principale solo nel finale.

Source: Amazon - May 29, 2022
A curious tale set in 1880s Sicily about multiple murders of one family.

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462+ Works 41,927 Members
Andrea Camilleri lives in Italy. Andrea Camilleri was born in Porto Empedocle, Sicily on September 6, 1925. He began his studies at Faculty of Literature in 1944 but never finished. He started to publish poems and short stories. He studied stage and film direction at the Silvio D'Amico Academy of Dramatic Arts from 1948 to 1950 and soon began work show more as a director and screen writer. Andrea Camilleri worked on several TV productions such as Inspector Maigret wirh Gino Cervi. In 1971 he returned to the Academy of Dramatic Arts holding the chair of Movie Direction and keeping it for 20 years. In 1978 he wrote his first novel - The Way Things Go which was followed by A Thread of Smoke in 1980. In 1992 he published The Hunting Season which turned out to be a best seller. In 1994 Andrea Camilleri published the first in a long series of novels - The Shape of Water which features the character Inspector Montalbano - a ficticious Sicilian detective in the police force of Vigata, an imaginary Sicilian town. The TV adaption of this book took off in popularity and Andrea Camilleri's home town was renamed Porto Empedocle Vigata. In 1998 he won the Nino Mortoglio International Book Award. He received an honorary degree from the University of Pisa in 2005. Camilleri has worked as a television and theater director, as well as a screenwriter. In 1978 he wrote his first novel, Il Corso delle Cose. The Montalbano series, featuring the Sicilian detective Inspector Montalbano, is Camilleri's most famous work of fiction, and it has been adapted into a television series. Camilleri had written a few historical novels when, in 1994, he wrote The Shape of Water, the first book starring a Sicilian detective based in the fictional town of Vigata. Camilleri won the Nino Martoglio International Book Award in 1998. He is considered to be one of Italy's greatest contemporary writers. Andrea Camilleri passed away on July 17, 2019 at the age of 93. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Casassas, Anna (Translator)
Sartarelli, Stephen (Translator)
Trujillo, Pep (Cover designer)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Hunting Season
Original title
La stagione della caccia
Original publication date
1992
Important places*
Sicilië
First words*
El vapor que feia de correu de línia des de Palerm, el Rei d'Itàlia -que els sicilians, tossuts, continuaven anomenant Franceschiello per una barreja de costum, abúlia i homenatge al rei borbó que havia inst... (show all)ituït el servei- va atracar, a toc de campana, a les dues del migdia del cap d'any de 1880, al port de Vigata.
Last words*
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)-Doncs jo, sincerament, no -va dir en Fofó La Matina.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Mystery, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
853.914Literature & rhetoricItalian, Romanian & related literaturesItalian fiction1900-20th Century1945-1999
LCC
PQ4863 .A3894 .S7313Language and LiteratureFrench, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literaturesItalian literatureIndividual authors, 1961-2000
BISAC

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417
Popularity
73,975
Reviews
10
Rating
½ (3.27)
Languages
9 — Catalan, Dutch, English, French, German, Greek, Italian, Polish, Spanish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
37
ASINs
5