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The Lizard's Bite (Nic Costa)

(Book #4 in the Nic Costa Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

On an August night on a small island near Venice, a fire explodes in a glassmaking shop. When help arrives, two people are dead, a rich Englishman is implicated, and investigators from Rome are... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

You can't outrun the devil

Sequel to 2 previous installments involving Nic Costa, partner Peroni, and Commissario Falcone, Lizard's Bite is more mystery than thriller. Two members, husband and wife, of a Murano glassmaking family are found dead in their own fornace, which has gone up in flames. Exiled to Venice for offending the powers that be in their own Rome police hierarchy, Costa and colleagues are assigned to close what looks like a cut and dried case. Who should emerge in the midst of the ashes but the enigmatic and powerful Hugo Massiter, who was heavily involved in a previous crime. Of course, in Venice, nothing is what it seems on the surface. The Roman cops are drawn inexorably into a complex web of death, lies, coverups, and stings, at their own great peril. Author Hewson further develops the characters of his big 3, as well as those of their lady loves, who are every bit as courageous as their men. Lizard starts slowly, then builds little by little, surprise by surprise, to its unexpected conclusion. We already have Lizard's sequel, The Seventh Sacrament, on our shelf, and I can't wait to see what happens next. I like these people.

WOWSER!

This kept me going until the very end! Awesome story, a great read and a grand plot. The first time I've read this author and I can't wait to read more!

A thrilling and fun novel by one of the finest mystery writers today

David Hewson may well be the finest mystery writer of our time. In my humble opinion, he's also one of our best contemporary writers, period. There are elements of Agatha Christie, Graham Greene and William Shakespeare in his work, but when you sit down and crack the spine of A SEASON OF THE DEAD or THE VILLA OF MYSTERIES, what you have is all and uniquely Hewson. Which brings us to THE LIZARD'S BITE, Hewson's latest work to be published in the United States. It is the fourth book in a series of novels featuring Italian policeman Nic Costa, who, along with his partner, Gianni Peroni, has been exiled to Venice. Reunions abound in the opening chapters --- some welcome, some not. All, however, are intriguing, not the least of which is the return of Inspector Leo Falcone, who has been laboring in Verona. But the trio is quickly put in the untenable position of investigating a pair of deaths for which the powers that be --- both official and unofficial --- have preordained the result. The situs of the murders is the Isola del Arcangeli, a factory that produced unique, highly priced and prized glass pieces for decades. But the factory and the Arcangelo family are suffering from a thousand cuts: an archaic furnace, cheap knockoffs, a falling demand. When Uriel, one of the Arcangelo brothers, is found dead in a fire at the factory, and the body of his wife Bella is discovered stuffed in the furnace, it is obvious to the local authorities that Uriel killed Bella and then died accidentally. Costa and Peroni are directed to make short work of an inverted pyramid investigation, with their reward being an early return to Rome. The conclusion is pre-ordained, as far as the local authorities are concerned. Hewson lets his readers know just enough to realize that the conclusion is dead wrong. The fun is watching how the police slowly deconstruct the obvious conclusion, deduce the correct one and then bring the culprit(s) to justice. Hewson peppers THE LIZARD'S BITE with a number of interesting --- and fascinating --- factoids about places and subjects that compel the reader to find out more on their own. But this common thread (among others) through Hewson's novels is not performed by rote. Think instead of a tightrope walker who performs his work daily for the same audience but introduces a new, and jeopardous, element every time. That's a Hewson novel. Very highly recommended. --- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub

Suberb Italian police procedural

The fire in the Archangeli family glassmaking factory on the Island of Morano off Venice led to two deaths that of Uriel Archangeli and his wife Bella. The local police want to write it off as an accident, but some insist a murder suicide occurred. Rome Police Detectives Nic Costa and Gianni Peroni are sent to Venice to rubber stamp either "truth". Instead the pair finds evidence to the contrary especially when seeking a motive as to to why Uriel would kill Bella or for that matter visa versa especially torching their beloved glassworks factory; an accident has been relegated to the realm of fantasy. The sleuths soon learn that Isolo di Archangeli glassworks was in the middle of a somewhat hostile takeover bid with Uriel as the toad in the road. Could someone wanted to remove the obstacle to the sale and is that the motive for a double homicide? In their latest Italian police procedural, Costa and Peroni get in trouble with the brass for doing their job of running a valid inquiry. Fans of the series will enjoy the top rate investigation into whether an accident, a suicide, or a homicide covered up by arson occurred. Newcomers will become engrossed with this superior thriller and seek out their previous caseload (see THE SACRED CUT). Harriet Klausner
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