Monday, July 15, 2024

Pentimento Mori by Valeria Corciolani

 
First Lines: Yellow. Everything is dry and yellow.
 
Art historian Dr. Edna Silvera becomes an amateur detective when she stumbles across a medieval painting in recently murdered Nando Folli's junk shop. She also turns into a thorn in Public Prosecutor Jacopo Bassi's side as she tries to learn more about the painting and why the junk dealer died.
 
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Valeria Corciolani's Pentimento Mori was irresistible to me because it's almost impossible for me to turn down a mystery that deals with any art history. In that respect, this first Edna Silvera mystery is brilliant. In fact, the fascinating nuggets of history and art often outshine the plot. I soaked up each one of Corciolani's factoids, including the significance of colors and pigments in medieval art as well as why Popes bless people with three fingers. 

Some of the similes used in Pentimento Mori are a bit clunky and make me think that they sound better in the original Italian, but that didn't stop me from trying to solve the mystery, and it certainly didn't stop me from liking the misanthropic Dr. Edna Silvera with her chickens named after movie stars. There is also quite a bit of humor to be found, and between the mystery, the characters, and the humor, I was reminded of my favorite Italian mystery writer, Andrea Camilleri.

Between the art history and the reminder of Camilleri, I am looking forward to seeing Edna Silvera again. She's the kind of quirky character that I love.

Pentimento Mori by Valeria Corciolani
Translated from the Italian by Unknown.
eISBN: 9781948104289
Kazabo Publishing © 2024
eBook, 299 pages

Amateur Sleuth, #1 Edna Silvera
Rating: B+
Source: the publisher

12 comments:

  1. She does sound like a very interesting character, Cathy. And art history interests me, too, so I can certainly see how this one got your attention. It sounds like a very promising start to a series. Hmm....I've never thought of naming chickens after movie stars, but hey, why not...

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    1. They're quite the characters and adept at letting their displeasure be known when she doesn't pay enough attention to them.

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  2. I love mysteries involving art! The fact that she's an art historian and stumbles on a medieval painting in a junk shop totally makes me want to read this one. :D

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    1. Like I said, I'm a sucker for an art history mystery.

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  3. Replies
    1. Do I detect another art history enthusiast?

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  4. Oh, Camilleri. Yes. And I add Donna Leon who is not Italian, but lived in Venice and sets her books there.

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  5. Oh, good - it's been a while since I read an art mystery, and this sounds like fun.

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    1. It is fun, although I still wonder about the translation. I searched and could not find the translator's name anywhere. Curious...

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  6. I’d like to track this down.

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