Translated from the Italian, this is a complex narrative, switching back and forth between various times and characters and places. It seems the Vatican kept through the centuries a detailed list of the worst crimes, as a display or tally of evil. This moves into modern life as a Milan policewo...
I read "The Whisperer" by Donato Carrisi and loved the book. It is a unique read with the types of crimes committed and even more so with the ending of how those crimes came to be committed. In "The Lost Girls of Rome", the reading experience is different. This book features excellent writing ...
Sandra Vega is a forensic photographer with the Rome police force. Her husband was a contract photojournalist whose work often took him into volatile environments. He was found dead several months before the beginning of the book, apparently jumping to his death from a partially constructed build...
Can't decide what I think of this book. In a lot of ways this is like the DaVinci Code book. It's cerebral mystery, takes interesting twists, but did not end how I thought. I actually didn't like the ending and felt it left me hanging. There are 3 f bombs on here. Why is that? Hate when authors u...
A murdered love, a driven heroine, a secret society of priests. These are the ingredients for a compelling thriller. It took a few tracks/chapters for me to fall into the rhythm of the novel--a confusion I attribute in part to listening to it on audio and not being able to see the breaks in poi...