Showing posts with label Hersilia Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hersilia Press. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 May 2013

Mediterranean Noir: Jean-Claude Izzo, Massimo Carlotto, Maurizio de Giovanni by Daniela Petracco.




In celebration of Europa Edition’s World Noir Season, UK director of Europa Editions Daniela Petracco blogs about Mediterranean Noir.

At long last it’s sunny and warm outside and we can imagine – however fleetingly – we are on the shores of the Mediterranean.  Blue skies and bright sunshine, almost as summery as Marseilles or Naples.  Bright sunshine and blue skies can dazzle but we only need to don our shades in order to see there is a very dark side to these sun-kissed locales.  The books in Europa’s World Noir collection explore this dark side. 

The criminal underbelly of Marseilles, the city with the highest incidence of gun crime in Europe, is Jean-Claude Izzo’s domain.  Izzo shot to fame overnight in France when Gallimard published the first volume of The Marseilles Trilogy.  One of those authors lucky enough to be appreciated both by critics and the reading public, he believed that the way to really know a city is through the crimes that are committed there.  That’s exactly what he does for Marseille, exploring the racial and social tensions that lie at the heart of this apparently paradisiac city, in writing that is at once lyrical and mercilessly hard-boiled. 

The Marseilles Trilogy is now available in the UK for the first time in Howard Curtis’ exquisite translation, at the same time as we’re reissuing the three volumes in the US.  Once you’ve read Total Chaos, you’ll be compelled to continue with Chourmo and Solea to following ex-cop Fabio Montale as he travels through the city and the ruins of his career.

With the Trilogy we are launching also a little companion volume, Garlic, Mint & Sweet Basil, a selection of essays and short writings, a treat for lovers of Jean-Claude Izzo, who died prematurely in 2000. 

Italian writer Massimo Carlotto is a long-time admirer of Izzo’s writing, and also a subscriber to the idea that a place is best known through the crimes committed there.  From the affluent North-East of Italy, the hinterland of Venice, he is a meticulous researcher with personal contacts from the criminal world and the police.  The stories he tells in his violent, sparely written novels, are all based on real events, true crimes that we have not yet heard all about as they are still being investigated – or have been successfully buried!  In a region of Italy where politics and organised crime are inextricably linked in a merry-go-round of illegal speculation, prostitution, fraud and money laundering, he manages to avoid the fate of Roberto Saviano – the author of Gomorra, who’s been living under police protection since his book, and the film based on it, became an international sensation – by keeping his stories strictly within the boundaries of fiction.   

Carlotto is a master at creating deeply unsympathetic characters.  Giorgio Pellegrini, the anti-hero of The Goodbye Kiss and of the new At the End of a Dull Day, is a truly nasty piece of work.  Violent and misogynistic, never touched by moral considerations and utterly ruthless, especially when his own well-being is at stake, Pellegrini is nonetheless, or maybe precisely because of this, a compelling figure.   When the powerful politician he works for as “fixer” attempts to defraud him and put him under the strict control of the criminal organisation “ndrangheta”, he is quick to shrug off his relatively tranquil lifestyle in his quest for survival and revenge, and quickly learns that murdering people is a bit like riding a bicycle.

Also out in May, the second book in the series The Seasons of Commissario RicciardiBlood Curse by Maurizio de Giovanni is, again in tune with the weather, the Springtime volume.  In the UK it comes after I Will Have Vengeance, published by Hersilia Press last year and shortlisted for the International Dagger Award.  In June there will be a further taste of de Giovanni’s skills when British readers will be able to read the standalone thriller The Crocodile, to be published by Abacus.  A nice upward trajectory for this author, and proof that fiction in translation is making inroads in the UK!

Back to Commissario Ricciardi, this atmospheric series is set in Naples in the 1930s, and built around a central character who has the singular gift – or rather curse – to be able to see the lingering shadows of those who have recently died a violent death, and hear their very last thought.  You would think this helpful to a police inspector involved in a murder inquiry but those last words are often cryptic and difficult to place in context.  Blood Curse, like the previous book, is a page turner full of local colour, much of it of a dark hue, as de Giovanni tells the story of a city where poverty and extreme wealth face each other at close quarters; where exponents of the camorra and grandees of the fascist regime are often closely linked, if not the very same; and where in the everyday scramble for something better emotions can run very high indeed. 

More about these titles in our free World Noir Reader – a selection of essays and extracts from the novels we’re publishing this season.  The digital edition of the World Noir reader can be downloaded following these links: epub (Nook), mobi (Kindle) or PDFOr tweet me @DanielaPetracco for a bound copy (until stocks last….).  You can also contact her by email.  Europa Editions may also be found on Facebook.











Monday, 4 February 2013

Criminal Splatterings!


According to Digital Spy, the BBC released a picture  (see  left) of Merlin star Colin Morgan in his new role on the three-part series Quirke, starring Gabriel Byrne as a Dublin pathologist who solves crimes in the 1950s.  The series is based on characters from the crime thrillers of Booker Prize winner John Banville (a/k/a Benjamin Black) and has been filming since November 2012.

If you have not listened to it yet, then there is an excellent podcast with the likes of Gillian Flynn, Michael Koryta and Joseph Wambaugh who talk about their writing and their books.  The podcast can be heard here.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, Johnny Depp is due to star as gangster thriller Black Mass, which recounts the real-life story of South Boston criminal mastermind Whitey Bulger.  Bulger is considered to be the most infamous criminal in the history of South Boston.  He became an FBI informant in order to take down a rival Mafia family, only to be double-crossed by the government and prosecuted himself.

Filming has just started on the BBC 1 legal thriller The Escape ArtistThe Escape Artist is an original three-part suspense thriller set in the world of criminal law.  David Tennant plays Will Burton, a talented junior barrister who specialises in spiriting people out of tight legal corners, hence his nickname of “The Escape Artist”.  Will is in high demand, as he has never lost a case.  However, when his talents acquit the prime suspect in a horrific murder trial, that brilliance comes back to bite him with unexpected and chilling results.  The Escape Artist features David Tennant and Sophie Okonedo.  A three part series The Escape Artist is due to be shown in 2013.

In what could be said to be serendipity according to the Guardian Agatha Christie was once investigated by MI5 who feared that she had a spy at Bletchley Park.  Their reasoning is because she named one of her characters in her wartime novel N or M Major Bletchley.

Whilst not strictly crime fiction related, I am pleased to learn that Thunderbirds is due to return to the small screen in 26 half-hour episodes fifty years after the first episode was shown.  Thunderbirds Are Go has been commissioned by ITV and will be shown in 2015.  The full article can be read here.

Interesting article in the Independent on Lynn Shepherd’s new novel A Treacherous Likeness which sees her Victorian private detective Charles Maddox delving into the outrageous and early life of Mary Shelley, the creator of Frankenstein.  The full article can be found here.

In the Independent Jane Jakeman interviews Gold Dagger winner Belinda Bauer who talks about setting her latest novel Rubbernecker in Cardiff.  The full article can be read here.

The always-interesting Lynda La Plante in the Telegraph claims that the criminal justice system favours criminals instead of victims.  The full article can be read here.

Hodder are due to publish the psychological thriller Under Your Skin by Sabine Durrant in April.  The trailer for the novel can watched below.


According to The Bookseller, Quercus have bought a new crime series set in Hong Kong by author Duncan Jepson in a two-book deal.  The article can be read here.  The first book in the series Emperors Once More is set in 2015 and follows detective Alex Soong as he investigates a conspiracy, which dates back to the Boxer Rebellion.

Interested in learning more about Italian crime fiction?  If so then join Ilaria Meliconi founder of Hersilia Press and writer, journalist and editor of Crime Time Barry Forshaw as they discuss all things Italian and crime.  Where?  Belgravia Bookshop, When?  21 February 2013.  Time?  6:30pm. More information can be found here.

According to Deadline.com Bradley Cooper has signed to star in and produce the upcoming adaptation of James Renner's novel The Man From Primrose Lane.  Southland writer Chad Feehan is adapting the story, about a true-crime writer who finds himself at the centre of a chain of serial murders and "must look outside the parameters of what he believed to be true about time and space" in order to solve the mystery. 

Also according to Deadline.com Nikolaj Arcel and Rasmus Heisterberg, who are the screenwriters behind the Swedish adaptation of Stieg Larsson's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo are due to adapt The Power of The Dog the thriller by Don Winslow.  They will be joined by Shane Salerno who was also co-wrote the screenplay of another Winslow adaptation, Savages.  The Power of The Dog is the story of a 30-year struggle between a hardened agent and a family of cartel kingpins in Mexico.  Shane and Winslow are also teaming up on the screenplay adaptation of Winslow’s Satori, which is in pre-production at Warner Bros.

According to Digital Spy, it looks like Tom Hardy and Noomi Rapace have signed on to star in spy thriller Child 44, which is based on the novel by Tom Rob Smith.  Child 44 is about a 1950s-era Soviet police officer who tries to solve a string of child murders.  The script has been penned by The Wire writer Richard Price.  Child 44 won the 2008 Ian Fleming Steel Dagger for best thriller and also the Waverton Good Read Award for first novels and the Galaxy Book Award for Best Newcomer with Child 44.

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Giorgio Scerbanenco's A Private Venus



Fans of Italian noir and Hersilia Press will be pleased to learn that in August 2012 Hersilia  Press will publish A Private Venus.

Shots were delighted to receive the press release below from Hersilia Press.

Giorgio Scerbanenco is considered by many to be the father of Italian noir and has been called 'the Italian Simenon'. He worked as a journalist and as a contributor to women's magazines before turning to crime fiction. The most prestigious Italian literary prize for crime fiction is named after him.


A Private Venus
Milan, 1966, and in the bleak suburb of Metanopoli, a woman is found dead on the side of the road.

Dr Duca Lamberti has just been released from prison, where he has spent three years for having practiced euthanasia.  No longer able to work in medicine, he takes a job helping Davide, a young and depressed alcoholic.  When Duca begins to delve into the young man’s past, he is drawn into a murky world of prostitution, pornography and murder.  As the case unravels, Duca takes the law into his own hands.

The first in this classic series featuring Duca Lamberti.

Howard Curtis has translated more than fifty books from French, Italian and Spanish, including works by Luigi Pirandello, Beppe Fenoglio, Georges Simenon and Gianrico Carofiglio.  His translation of Edoardo Albinati’s Coming Back was awarded the John Florio Prize in 2004, and his translation of Pietro Grossi's Fists was awarded the Premio Campiello Great Britain in 2010.
For further information, please contact Ilaria Meliconi at Hersilia Press on 0775 1484357 or email info@hersilia-press.co.uk

A Private Venus by Giorgio Scerbanenco (translated by Howard Curtis)
Published by Hersilia Press, 2 August 2012
£7.99 (paperback) 978-0-9563796-4-1
£4.99 (eBook) 978-0-9563796-7-2