Monday, May 11, 2026

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: An Enigma by the Sea by Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini

  

Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini were a well-known literary duo in Italy for several decades until Lucentini’s death in 2002. For about forty years they co-wrote newspaper and magazine articles, literary essays, edited numerous anthologies, and published six groundbreaking and best-selling mystery novels. Their first novel, The Sunday Woman, was adapted for film in 1975 starring Marcello Mastroianni, Jacqueline Bisset and Jean-Louis Trintignant.

An Enigma by the Sea, their third book, was first published in Italian in 1991 as Enigma in luogo di mare by Arnoldo Mondadori Editore S.p.A., Milano. It was published in the UK in 1994 by Chatto & Windus Ltd, London. Bitter Lemon Press has issued a fresh edition with a translation by Gregory Dowling, an Oxford graduate now residing in Venice. Dowling is no stranger to crime fiction, he’s the author of a half dozen historical mysteries.

Bitter Lemon Press seems to specialize in exquisitely written mysteries, although this particular title is more of a comedy of manners than crime fiction. Readers who enjoy snark and eccentric characters along with their whodunnits will adore this book. The aforesaid eccentrics inhabit 153 villas set among the pine trees of the forest Gualdana along the coast of Italy. Most of them use their villas as vacation residences but some inhabit them year round and rely on the tiny village nearby to supply their needs. There’s Signor Monforti, chronic depressive and inveterate naysayer who yearns after the beautiful Signora Neri. He is sure if she would just marry him, his negativity would fly away, never to return. Signora Neri is of a more practical turn of mind and questions just how happy she could be with someone who never is.

Then there’s Signora Baldacci, known to be straying outside her marriage with the much younger Dino Fioravanti. It was popularly supposed that Signor Baldacci was in ignorance of this arrangement until the two men encountered each other outside a local bar and blows were exchanged. Threats were also uttered and the local police fear the threats will be carried out; they were specific and detailed, these threats, and both parties have the means to execute them. Much time and worry is expended within the police office, trying to decide what to do.

Then there’s the villa infested with rats and the daughters of the family shrieking and huddling on the beds. And Signor Salvini who is sneaking a girl into his wife’s vacation villa for the usual reasons, but she is so clearly no better than she should be that he cannot be seen publicly with her for fear of word getting back to his wife. He makes up all sorts of reasons to stop along the way to the village so as to arrive after dark. And the pair of comedy writers who have encountered writers’ block. And on and on.

The story seems never to get around to any crime to speak of but the villa residents and the village storekeepers are so amusing I didn’t really mind. Until about midway in the book one character after another realizes this person or that one hasn’t been seen for awhile. They each make their way to the Marshal’s office to report a missing person, who is overwhelmed by the report of the fourth unexplained absence. Watching the local police investigate is quite entertaining.

A list in the back of the book itemizes the characters and their role in the book. It would be more helpful up front where the reader could consult at the first moment of confusion, of which I had many.

Readers who require frenetic action should pass on this story. But I found it to be a witty, beautifully written book. Kirkus summed it up neatly: “A juicily acerbic mystery that’s more lurid soap opera than whodunit.”

 


·         Publisher: Bitter Lemon Press

·         Publication date: April 21, 2026

·         Language: English

·         Print length: 416 pages

·         ISBN-10: 1916725198

·         ISBN-13: 978-1916725195

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3Pwxtoz

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

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