The Salamander

by Morris West

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A political thriller set in Italy as the country walks a slippery, unfamiliar tightrope called democracy. On either side, well-organized groups of right-wing and left-wing extremists lie in wait, ready to pounce.

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8 reviews
Written in the 70s when Italy was a unified country still in its infancy. A political, murder story that focused on the corruption of the system and the possible future of a country that couldn't solve the issue of its prefered political structure: dictatorship, marxism, fascism, democracy. An interesting reflection of the times and reading it 50 years later knowing what has taken place since then.
* Inherited from Mum's shelves.
La salamandra es un animal legendario que vive en el fuego. Es, por lo tanto, un símbolo del superviviente. Y es, también, el nombre en clave de Bruno Manzini, poderoso industrial italiano de extraño pasado. La Salamandra desafía al coronel Dante Alighieri Matucci, alto funcionario del servicio de inteligencia, a investigar la muerte de un general neofascista. La investigación lo llevará a enfrentar el eterno problema del hombre: saber qué precio se debe pagar por la vida, y cuál por el alma.
Een medewerker van de Italiaanse geheime dienst komt in de problemen als hij geen vertrouwen meer heeft in zijn baas en in de baas van de carabinieri. Hij ontmoet een steenrijke man, die evenals hijzelf geen vertrouwen heeft in de gang van zaken en die ook alles in het werk wil stellen om een nieuwe dictatuur te voorkomen. Uiteindelijk lukt dat ook. Spannend boek!
En la Italia de los setenta, el general Pantaleone es asesinado. En el lugar del crimen, que las autoridades hacen pasar por suicidio, aparece una tarjeta con el símbolo de la salamandra. El coronel Matucci de la inteligencia italiana se hace cargo del caso, descubriendo tras la trama un proyecto de golpe de Estado que abandera su propio Director. Tras enredarse en una relación con Lili, la amante polaca del general asesinado, Matucci entra en contacto con la propia Salamandra, que resulta ser un enigmático y próspero industrial.

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62+ Works 7,757 Members
Morris West was born in 1916 in St Kilda, Melbourne. At the age of thirteen, he left home to study with the Christian Brothers Order in Sydney, but left in 1939 after 12 years, before taking his final vows. He was fluent in Italian and French, and taught modern languages and mathematics in New South Wales and Tasmania in his twenties. He spent show more four years code-breaking as a cipher officer in the AIF, and then for a decade he concentrated on producing and writing radio plays. West's first novel was published in 1945 and he began writing full time in the 1950s. He went to Italy were he went undercover with Father Mario Borelli, who was working with street urchins, and wrote The Children of the Sun, published in 1957. In 1959, following six months as Vatican correspondent for The Daily Mail, he published The Devil's Advocate, which won the William Heinemann Award of the Royal Society, the National Brotherhood Award of the National Council of Christians and Jews as well as the James Tait Black Memorial Award. Shoes of a Fisherman, the first of The Papal Series, which included The Clowns of God, Lazarus and Eminence, won the Best-Sellers Paperback of the Year Award in 1965. West helped to found the Australian Society of Authors, was chairman of the National Book Council, chairman of the National Library of Australia and a fellow of the World Academy of Art and Science. He was made member of the order of Australia (MBE) in 1985 and officer of the order of Australia (AO) in 1997. Apart from writing novels, West also wrote screenplays, radio dramas, plays and was also an artist. Translated into twenty-seven languages, his works have sold more that sixty million copies. He also wrote an account on his spiritual journey, A View From the Ridge, published at the end of 1996. Morris West died while working at his desk on 9th October 1999. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
La Salamandra
Original title
The Salamander
Original publication date
1973
People/Characters
Bruno Manzini; Colonel Dante Alighieri Matucci; Lili Anders; Marcantonio Leporello
Important places
Rome, Italy
Related movies
The Salamander (1981 | IMDb)
Epigraph
If we could learn to look instead of gawking
We'd see the horror in the heart of farce.
If only we would act instead of talking,
We would not always end up on our arse.
This was the thing that had us nearly mas... (show all)tered!
Don't yet rejoice in his defeat, you men.
For though the world stood up and stopped the bastard,
The bitch that bore him is in heat again.

From Arturo Ui by Bertolt Brecht,
translated by George Tabori
Dedication
for
SILVIO STEFANO
wise counsellor, honest advocate,
friend of my heart
First words
Between midnight and dawn, while his fellow Romans were celebrating the end of Carnival, Massimo Count Pantaleone, General of the Military Staff, died in his bed.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And she said to me: 'There is no greater grief
Than to remember happy times, in misery;
And your teacher knows it, too.'
Original language
English
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Suspense & Thriller
DDC/MDS
823Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction
LCC
PZ4 .W519Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

Statistics

Members
381
Popularity
81,436
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.40)
Languages
13 — Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
44
ASINs
19