Sisters at War
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1940 Liverpool. The pressures of war threaten to tear apart two sisters traumatised by their...
Historical Fiction WW2
The Poison Keeper
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Naples 1633 Aqua Tofana – One drop to heal. Three drops to kill. Giulia Tofana longs for...
Historical Fiction Renaissance Italian
The Fortune Keeper (Tofana #3)
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Count your nights by stars, not shadows ~ Italian Proverb Winter in Renaissance Venice Mia...
Historical Fiction Renaissance Italy
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2200 KP) rated Murder on Pleasant Avenue in Books
Oct 13, 2022 (Updated Oct 13, 2022)
It was a pleasure to jump back to 1900 once again and visit these characters. The action unfolds quickly. While I figured a few things out before the characters, I didn’t have the entire picture put together until they did. I did feel the final chapter felt forced into the book, but that was a minor complaint. I love spending time with these characters. We don’t see all the supporting players, but I was happy with some of the advances we saw for the core characters. I also enjoyed the seeds planted for some upcoming historical events. I’m so glad I’ve spent the time reading this series. Anyone who enjoys a good historical mystery will enjoy it as well.
ClareR (5721 KP) rated The Darkest Sin in Books
Dec 4, 2023
This story picks up not long after book 1, and Aldo is called to a convent that has had reports of an intruder. This isn’t a harmonious convent, though. There are opposing ideas on what sort of convent it should be (with some very unchristian nuns!), and it has it’s share of secrets.
Meanwhile, Constable Carlo Strocchi has taken his new wife home to introduce her to his mother, and he happens to stumble across the remains of a rather unpopular former officer of the city’s criminal court. And it looks as though he has been murdered.
I love this blend of historical fact and fiction: the Medici’s and the roles of nuns (to be enclosed or not?), the inequalities in Italian society at the time, women’s roles and lack of power, the structure of authority and how the catholic church ruled supreme (and not particularly morally). Aldo is the bastard son of a wealthy man, and when he is ‘reunited’ with his family, he’s not exactly welcomed back with open arms. He does however meet his niece, and she is far more accepting of him, even if it is, I think, a way of getting her own way!!
This is such an atmospheric read, and is thoroughly addictive. There are enough twists, turns and threats to Aldo’s life to make it very difficult to put the book down!
So is Aldo a threat to my love of Giordano Bruno or Matthew Shardlake? Err, nope, but he’s joining them - and if you like either of these, you’ll love Aldo Cesare!
Entryways of Milan - Ingressi Di Milano
Karl Kolbitz, Fabrizio Ballabio, Daniel Sherer and Lisa Hockemeyer
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Bella Figura Milan's sumptuous modernist hallways First impressions count, especially in Milano. In...
Romeo Sozzi and Promemoria: The Designer Behind the Most Beautiful Furniture in the World
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As the third generation of specialized wood craftsmen in cabinetmaking and restoration, Romeo Sozzi...
The Italian Secretary: A Further Adventure of Sherlock Holmes
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Mycroft Holmes, charged with ensuring the personal safety of Queen Victoria, calls on his brother...
The Via Francigena Canterbury to Rome: Canterbury to the Great St Bernard Pass: Part 1:
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This comprehensive guidebook covers the first half of the Via Francigena - a 1900km pilgrim route...
Screen Nazis: Cinema, History, and Democracy
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From the late 1930s to the early twenty-first century, European and American filmmakers have...