Please
welcome author Joan Leotta to the blog today. This is the first guest reviewer
by Joan and hopefully there will be many more to come…
The
Cook of the Halcyon by
Andrea Camilleri translated by Stephen Sartarelli
Review by Joan Leotta
Usually
I do not like to read a series out of order, but in this case, I made an
exception and so should you. This book was conceived more than ten years ago by
Andrea Camilleri as an Italian American film project. When circumstances
changed regarding its viability Camilleri turned the project into another Camilleri
book, one that he put away and is not, after his death coming out as an out of order book in the series. This
is number twenty-seven to be released but in terms of a timeline would have
occurred several years before number twenty-six.
As
often, the book opens with Inspector Montalbano in the middle of a dream. In
this case, the inspector has married Livia (his long-term girlfriend who lives
in Genoa). Then he finds himself tossed into the sea and is about to drown when
he awakens. Catarella, one of Montalbano’s crew, calls from the station to get
Montalbano started on a murder—that quickly turns into two murders of two
disparate people-- a recently laid -off low level worker and a businessman who
turns out to be way less than honorable. The connection between the two initial
murders and the spur to non-stop action,
and more, turns out to be a big yacht that stops not far from Vigata now and
then, Halcyon. This mysterious ship is a suspected sort of floating international gambling
den and brothel. Drug smugglers, gambling, prostitution, the high seas,
and a hint of even more nefarious activity attracts American Federal agents,
Carabinieri and Italian special units to the scene—so much action! So many
actors! Yet, all are kept deftly under the control by Camilleri’s pen.
The
book’s plotting and drama benefit from the pacing of film and of course, the
book shows the author’s usual skill with characters, dialogue, and the
wonderful Sicilian setting. While I do not want to give away the plot which
takes our dear gourmand Inspector Montalbano asks Adelina to show him how
to cook. This knowledge , later in the
novel makes him the captain of his own destiny—in the Kitchen, and yes, in a
ship’s galley!
The
one caveat with this novel is that you will want to read it all in one
sitting—and afterward, you will be searching the internet for some of
Montalbano’s kitchen creations. It will leave you hungry also for more Montalbano novels—of
course. There is at least one more coming out, likely the last, the one that
will finish the series, something Camilleri wrote and put into a vault when he
felt that his death was near (although he outlasted his own predictions by several
years) so that his fans would not be left hanging as to his intentions for the
men of the station at Vigata and all of the other characters Camilleri created,
and we have grown to love. It is with sadness and joyful anticipation in equal
parts that I await the 28th and likely final book in the Inspector
Montalbano series. If you want to settle yourself down for a long and
delightful visit to Sicily start with the Shape of Water, the first one in the
Inspector Montalbano series.
Five stars for The Cook of the Halcyon, five stars for the entire series.
• Publisher: Penguin Books (March 16,
2021)
• Language: English
• Paperback: 256 pages
• ISBN-10: 014313618
Joan
Leotta ©2021
Joan Leotta plays with words on page and stage. Her poetry, essays, cnf , short stories, and articles are widely published. Mysteries are favorite things to read..short and long..and to write.
When not worki gushed is either curled up with a book or hunting for seashells.
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