A Dead Man in Naples: Seymour of Special Branch Series, Book 6
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Description
Praise for the Dead Man series:
“Sheer fun.”—The Times (London)
“An unfailingly amusing historical series.”—Booklist
“The steady pace, atmospheric design, and detailed description re-create a complicated city. A recommended historical series.”—Library Journal
“Picking up a new book by Michael Pearce reminds you why people enjoy reading mysteries.”—The Denver Post
“Pearce again demonstrates his skill at making the past come alive and at seamlessly weaving actual political intrigues into his plot.”—Publishers Weekly
“The whodunit is clever and well written, as is the case in all of Michael Pearce’s tales . . . the sense of time and place is outstanding.”—Mystery Gazette
Lionel Scampion, British consul in Naples, has been stabbed to death while bicycling through the piazza of the Porta Carmine. According to his sister, he had no enemies. The Neapolitan police suggest he was murdered by a bicycle-racing rival. In Naples, every mystery is attributed to the Camorra, a powerful criminal society; could its members be involved? Scampion enthusiastically backed the Italian invasion of Libya and befriended army officers of the newly formed Italian Bicycle Brigade. Now the Foreign Office in London has heard that international politics emanating from Rome might have been involved. Seymour of the Special Branch is sent to find out the motive for the murder and, incidentally, to identify the culprit.
Michael Pearce was raised in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, trained as a Russian interpreter, and had an academic career in England. He now lives in London.
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
British Special Branch officer Seymour is sent to Naples to investigate consulate official Lionel Scampion's murder. To suggest he is merely on vacation, he travels with his fiancée, Chantale. Did Scampion, an avid bicyclist, die at the hand of a racing rival? Or did he anger a member of the powerful Camorra, a Mafia-like criminal society? Through talking to people and decoding a lottery ticket, Seymour identifies Scampion's killer and the motive for the crime. Taking place during the Italian-Libyan war in the early 1900s, the story intertwines details of the Naples lottery, the war, bicycling, the Camorra, and daily life in Naples into a leisurely paced but involving story. Told from multiple points of view (the numerous characters are a bit difficult to keep straight), the novel nevertheless captures the mood of early-twentieth-century Italy. Pearce is also the author of the Mamur Zapt series.--O'Brien, Sue Copyright 2009 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
Pearce's sixth mystery to feature Scotland Yard's Sandor Seymour (after 2008's A Dead Man in Barcelona) deftly mixes humor with a whodunit plot. A couple of years before WWI, the Foreign Office sends Seymour to Italy to unofficially investigate the stabbing death of Lionel Scampion, a British consular representative. As a diplomat, Scampion wasn't altogether satisfactory, going so far in his enthusiasm as to volunteer to fight for Italy in its war with Libya. Seymour must consider a hypothesis raised at the inquest that Scampion's murder had to do with a rivalryÅbetween bicycling clubs as well as the possibility that the killer acted from political or personal motives.ÅAs in the author's better-known Mamur Zapt series (The Mark of the Pasha, etc.), Pearce does better at clever word play and investing his characters with charming foibles than establishing clues to buttress a fair-play solution.ÅStill, this entry stands as the best to date in the Dead Man series. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Book Review
War, honor and the undervaluation of women, circa 1900. When Lionel Scampion, a senior member of the British consulate assigned to Naples, is knifed in broad daylight for no apparent reason, Seymour of Scotland Yard's Special Branch (A Dead Man in Barcelona, 2008, etc.) is sent to investigate. So as not to alert the Neapolitans, he brings along Chantale, his stunning Moroccan fiance, and explains that they've come to enjoy a pre-honeymoon vacation. Scampion, a keen cyclist, may have been killed by an overzealous racing competitor, but Seymour thinks a lottery ticket found in his shorts could lead to a different motive. The detective is also intrigued by Scampion's meetings with a married Marchesa and his interest in an Arab widow denied the pension due her because her Italian husband died fighting in the Libya campaign. Even more suspect are the Camorra, the Neapolitan Mafia and Sursum Corda, a secret society that champions certain political causes. Seymour enjoys his snail-salad lunches, his chats with a mathematician-turned-priest with a gift for picking lottery winners, his mild flirtations with the Marchesa and the views he and Chantale share of the bay at sunset. Meanwhile, plans are laid for a major cycling race pitting the army against the locals; missing bicycle parts turn up in Libya; and the widow gets her pension only after a word from the Camorra, which will demand favors in return. Glacially slow, but with well-aimed jabs at turn-of-the-century attitudes. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
British Special Branch officer Seymour is sent to Naples to investigate consulate official Lionel Scampion's murder. To suggest he is merely on vacation, he travels with his fiancée, Chantale. Did Scampion, an avid bicyclist, die at the hand of a racing rival? Or did he anger a member of the powerful Camorra, a Mafia-like criminal society? Through talking to people and decoding a lottery ticket, Seymour identifies Scampion's killer and the motive for the crime. Taking place during the Italian-Libyan war in the early 1900s, the story intertwines details of the Naples lottery, the war, bicycling, the Camorra, and daily life in Naples into a leisurely paced but involving story. Told from multiple points of view (the numerous characters are a bit difficult to keep straight), the novel nevertheless captures the mood of early-twentieth-century Italy. Pearce is also the author of the Mamur Zapt series. Copyright 2009 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Pearce's sixth mystery to feature Scotland Yard's Sandor Seymour (after 2008's A Dead Man in Barcelona) deftly mixes humor with a whodunit plot. A couple of years before WWI, the Foreign Office sends Seymour to Italy to unofficially investigate the stabbing death of Lionel Scampion, a British consular representative. As a diplomat, Scampion wasn't altogether satisfactory, going so far in his enthusiasm as to volunteer to fight for Italy in its war with Libya. Seymour must consider a hypothesis raised at the inquest that Scampion's murder had to do with a rivalry between bicycling clubs as well as the possibility that the killer acted from political or personal motives. As in the author's better-known Mamur Zapt series (The Mark of the Pasha, etc.), Pearce does better at clever word play and investing his characters with charming foibles than establishing clues to buttress a fair-play solution. Still, this entry stands as the best to date in the Dead Man series. (Dec.)
[Page 36]. Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Pearce, M. (2010). A Dead Man in Naples: Seymour of Special Branch Series, Book 6 (Unabridged). BBC Audiobooks America.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Pearce, Michael. 2010. A Dead Man in Naples: Seymour of Special Branch Series, Book 6. BBC Audiobooks America.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Pearce, Michael. A Dead Man in Naples: Seymour of Special Branch Series, Book 6 BBC Audiobooks America, 2010.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Pearce, M. (2010). A dead man in naples: seymour of special branch series, book 6. Unabridged BBC Audiobooks America.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Pearce, Michael. A Dead Man in Naples: Seymour of Special Branch Series, Book 6 Unabridged, BBC Audiobooks America, 2010.
Copy Details
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