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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
The long-awaited last novel in the transporting and beloved New York Times bestselling Inspector Montalbano series
"At eighty, I foresaw Montalbano's departure from the scene, I got the idea and I didn't let it slip away. So I found myself writing this novel which is the final chapter; the last book in the series. And I sent it to my publisher saying to keep it in a drawer and to publish it only when I am gone." –Andrea Camilleri
 
Montalbano receives an early-morning phone call, but this time it's not Catarella announcing a murder, but a man called Riccardino who's dialed a wrong number and asks him when he'll be arriving at the meeting. Montalbano, in irritation, says: "In ten minutes." Shortly after, he gets another call, this one announcing the customary murder. A man has been shot and killed outside a bar in front of his three friends. It turns out to be the same man who called him.
 
Thus begins an intricate investigation further complicated by phone calls from "the Author" in tour de force of metafiction and Montalbano’s last case.
 
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 26, 2021
      In an amusing metafictional twist, Camilleri (1925–2019) plays a part in his elegiac 28th and final mystery featuring Sicilian police inspector Salvo Montalbano (after The Cook of the Halcyon). Just shy of five o’clock in the morning, Montalbano’s phone rings. The caller identifies himself as Riccardino and says, “We’re all here already, outside the Bar Aurora, and you’re the only one missing!” Peeved at being disturbed, Montalbano tells the stranger he’ll be right there, hangs up, and goes back to bed. A second call comes an hour later—from his police colleagues, who ask him to come to the Bar Aurora to investigate the murder of Riccardo Lopresti. Montalbano feels “strangely certain—with a certainty as absolute as it was inexplicable—that the poor bastard who was shot was the same person who had called him on the phone before dawn by dialing a wrong number.” As motives begin to multiply, Montalbano’s investigation is muddled by phone calls from “the Author” spouting far-fetched suggestions on how to proceed. Incisive wit colors this insightful and intriguing farewell. The sad, poetic ending is perfect.

    • Library Journal

      July 30, 2021

      Andrea Camilleri (1925-2019) was a prolific and often profound writer of mysteries. His stunning "Inspector Montalbano" series now spans 28 titles; many of his works were adapted for television and film. In this final series installment (after The Cook of the Halcyon), a man is shot in front of his friends as they gather for an early-morning walk. Inspector Montalbano begins the novel feeling the weight of his age and his work as a police detective. He begins to unravel the case built on half-truth witness statements, a shady henchman, and a department that wants results. But this isn't your typical murder mystery. As in real life, this novel becomes metafiction. Montalbano is well known, and his fame and success as a detective has spurred television shows and novels. While he works the case, he fights with his commander at the police station, the public who demand answers, and even an author who is writing about the inspector's latest caper. VERDICT Camilleri's series finale busts out of the traditional mystery genre to give fans an inspiring, thoughtful, and humorous farewell to a beloved character.--Ron Samul, New London, CT

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 15, 2021
      The long-running and much-loved Salvo Montalbano series, set in Vig�ta, Sicily, concludes with an astonishing, meta-infused narrative that integrates the series' creator, Camilleri himself, into the story as a character called the Author, complete with a "smoke-shredded voice." (Camilleri, who died in 2019, was a notoriously heavy smoker.) A man called Riccardino has been shot, and what at first seems a revenge killing stemming from his dalliances with friends' wives, turns darker when Montalbano finds evidence that the "four musketeers," as the friends are known, are involved in a criminal enterprise. The reader learns that Montalbano has been having extensive interactions with the Author, who has been publishing novels based on the detective's cases, which have resulted in a popular television program. Montalbano, tired and confused after his long and adversarial career, keeps wondering how his other self, the one on TV, might act, and he's incensed when the Author keeps faxing him possible resolutions to the case he's working on. One scenario the Author suggests would have the detective involved in something of an OK Corral confrontation; exasperated, Montalbano decides to terminate his relationship with this intrusive writer. What follows will delight Camilleri's legions of fans, many of whom have long felt a meta-infused connection of their own with Montalbano, his friends and colleagues, and the world of Vig�ta.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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