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A Rich Full Death by Michael Dibdin — book cover

A Rich Full Death

by Michael Dibdin
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Overview

Florence,1855. "The English are dying too much," the city's police chief observes. And members of the foreign community in this quaint Italian backwater, both English and American, are indeed dying at an alarming rate and in an extraordinary variety of ingenious and horrible ways.
      
With the local authorities out of their depth, the distinguished resident Robert Browning launches his own private investigation, aided and abetted by an expatriot Robert Booth. Unfortunately, their amateur sleuthing is hampered by the fact that each of their suspects becomes the next victim in a series of murders orchestrated by a killer with a taste for poetic justice. A Rich Full Death features characters both historical and imaginary, ranging from an enticing servant girl to Mr. Browning's consumptive, world-famous wife, Elizabeth Barrett, in a tale lush with period detail, intricately plotted, and with a truly astonishing final twist.

Synopsis

Florence,1855. "The English are dying too much," the city's police chief observes. And members of the foreign community in this quaint Italian backwater, both English and American, are indeed dying at an alarming rate and in an extraordinary variety of ingenious and horrible ways.
      
With the local authorities out of their depth, the distinguished resident Robert Browning launches his own private investigation, aided and abetted by an expatriot Robert Booth. Unfortunately, their amateur sleuthing is hampered by the fact that each of their suspects becomes the next victim in a series of murders orchestrated by a killer with a taste for poetic justice. A Rich Full Death features characters both historical and imaginary, ranging from an enticing servant girl to Mr. Browning's consumptive, world-famous wife, Elizabeth Barrett, in a tale lush with period detail, intricately plotted, and with a truly astonishing final twist.

Publishers Weekly

The cast of Dibdin's mid-19th-century literary puzzler features a Beatrice, an Isabel, an Elizabeth and even an Edith, but its true heroine is Florence, the Italian city where the twisting tale plays out. In letters to an old friend in America, expat Robert Booth narrates his adventures in Florence with other American and English exiles, including Robert Browning and his invalid wife, Elizabeth Barrett, and Isabel Allen and her wealthy husband. Booth, whose dreams of literary fame have faded as surely as his once passionate love for Isabel, teams up with Browning to investigate a series of six cryptic murders that occur in the expat community, turning the "paradise of exiles" into a miniature hell. As their pursuit of the killer leads them through a maze of social and political circles, the two men's relationship shifts, for they discover that they are both attracted to the same Italian servant. Dibdin's lively dialogue and period prose complement his vigorous characters. The novel relies heavily on allusions to Dante's Inferno, and, though it lacks hair-raising suspense, its many subtle clues and plot reversals are engrossing. The author of the Aurelio Zen mysteries displays a sure-handed command of literature, history and humor in this intricate, literate period piece. Author tour. (July) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Michael Dibdin

Michael Dibdin was born in England and raised in Northern Ireland. He attended Sussex University and the University of Alberta in Canada. He spent five years in Perugia, Italy, where he taught English at the local university. He went on to live in Oxford, England and Seattle, Washington. He was the author of eighteen novels, eleven of them in the popular Aurelio Zen series, including Ratking, which won the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger, and Cabal, which was awarded the French Grand Prix du Roman Policier. His work has been translated into eighteen languages. He died in 2007.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"Fruitily atmospheric as a crumbling necropolis with a startling (and hauntingly ambiguous) finale." —The Guardian

"Vigorous and amusing. . .Dibdin convincingly creates the cosmopolitan society of nineteenth-century Florence." —Daily Telegraph

"Clever plotting, witty writing, and a well-judged display of historical background." —The Times (London)

"Dibdin has a gift for shocking the unshockable reader." —Ruth Rendell

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The cast of Dibdin's mid-19th-century literary puzzler features a Beatrice, an Isabel, an Elizabeth and even an Edith, but its true heroine is Florence, the Italian city where the twisting tale plays out. In letters to an old friend in America, expat Robert Booth narrates his adventures in Florence with other American and English exiles, including Robert Browning and his invalid wife, Elizabeth Barrett, and Isabel Allen and her wealthy husband. Booth, whose dreams of literary fame have faded as surely as his once passionate love for Isabel, teams up with Browning to investigate a series of six cryptic murders that occur in the expat community, turning the "paradise of exiles" into a miniature hell. As their pursuit of the killer leads them through a maze of social and political circles, the two men's relationship shifts, for they discover that they are both attracted to the same Italian servant. Dibdin's lively dialogue and period prose complement his vigorous characters. The novel relies heavily on allusions to Dante's Inferno, and, though it lacks hair-raising suspense, its many subtle clues and plot reversals are engrossing. The author of the Aurelio Zen mysteries displays a sure-handed command of literature, history and humor in this intricate, literate period piece. Author tour. July Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Dibdin, author of the "Aurelio Zen" series, re-creates 1855 Florence here, as a skulking but hardly disinterested witness sees Robert Browning beside a newly hanged woman. Historical characters mix with fictional ones in another of Dibdin's evocative mysteries. First-rate. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Marilyn Stasio

Michael Dibdin's historical mystery A Rich Full Death... seems a mild literary anecdote. As, indeed, it is — but one told by a storyteller adept at manipulating both his material and his listeners' imaginations.
The New York Times Book Review

Kirkus Reviews

A Rich Full Death ( paperback original; Jul. 20; 288 pp.; 0-375-70614-3): Boston social climber Robert Booth, visiting Florence in 1855, wins an introduction to Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning but loses his former lover Isabel Eakin, whose murder introduces this teasing, intricate epistolary novel from versatile Dibdin (A Long Finish, 1998, etc.), which mingles fact and fiction, settling somewhere in the marshy middle.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1999
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Pages
204
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780375706141

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