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The knight and death, and, One way or another

Tekijä: Leonardo Sciascia

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioKeskustelut
313769,634 (3.88)-
From the acclaimed author of Day of the Owl, The Wine Dark Sea and The Moro Affair.
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Having discovered Sciascia for the first time a few months ago, in a chance encounter at a Leiden bookshop, I grabbed four more in London, wrapped them up for Christmas and waited....

This slim volume is in the same vein as To Each His Own. Both contain murder, but one wouldn't recommend them to a crime fiction aficionado. Nothing is solved, the stories stop and some observations about the human condition have been made. The first of these two stories, some fifty pages, is a reverie by a dying detective, who is on his last case whilst reflecting on life, death, and setting about some of the things one might do in the face of a rapidly and permanently closing window of time.

The second story, One way or Another, is the more substantial of the two, around one hundred pages. An artist happens upon a most peculiar hotel, run by priests and about to host some of the movers and shakers (as they would no doubt now be called) of Italy. Industrial and political leaders rubbing shoulders with cardinals. It's a yearly spiritual retreat. Fine food is eaten, the best wine drunk and five mistresses are lodged there, though they never appear in company. Deaths - murders - begin to take place. But whereas in the average murder mystery such occurrences are at the heart of the story, here they are - not incidental - but merely part of the story. The priest who organises the event and the curious artist who is permitted to stay, verbally joust with each other throughout. Interesting thoughts about religion consequently abound. Poirot it is not.

I suspect that both of these stories may be allegorical, but I'm way too literal to get that. On a concrete level, Sciascia deals with the realities of institutionalised corruption in Italy. Can one do that and be allegorical as well? I don't know.

rest here: https://alittleteaalittlechat.wordpress.com/2019/01/12/the-knight-and-death-one-... ( )
  bringbackbooks | Jun 16, 2020 |
Having discovered Sciascia for the first time a few months ago, in a chance encounter at a Leiden bookshop, I grabbed four more in London, wrapped them up for Christmas and waited....

This slim volume is in the same vein as To Each His Own. Both contain murder, but one wouldn't recommend them to a crime fiction aficionado. Nothing is solved, the stories stop and some observations about the human condition have been made. The first of these two stories, some fifty pages, is a reverie by a dying detective, who is on his last case whilst reflecting on life, death, and setting about some of the things one might do in the face of a rapidly and permanently closing window of time.

The second story, One way or Another, is the more substantial of the two, around one hundred pages. An artist happens upon a most peculiar hotel, run by priests and about to host some of the movers and shakers (as they would no doubt now be called) of Italy. Industrial and political leaders rubbing shoulders with cardinals. It's a yearly spiritual retreat. Fine food is eaten, the best wine drunk and five mistresses are lodged there, though they never appear in company. Deaths - murders - begin to take place. But whereas in the average murder mystery such occurrences are at the heart of the story, here they are - not incidental - but merely part of the story. The priest who organises the event and the curious artist who is permitted to stay, verbally joust with each other throughout. Interesting thoughts about religion consequently abound. Poirot it is not.

I suspect that both of these stories may be allegorical, but I'm way too literal to get that. On a concrete level, Sciascia deals with the realities of institutionalised corruption in Italy. Can one do that and be allegorical as well? I don't know.

rest here: https://alittleteaalittlechat.wordpress.com/2019/01/12/the-knight-and-death-one-... ( )
  bringbackbooks | Jun 16, 2020 |
Having discovered Sciascia for the first time a few months ago, in a chance encounter at a Leiden bookshop, I grabbed four more in London, wrapped them up for Christmas and waited....

This slim volume is in the same vein as To Each His Own. Both contain murder, but one wouldn't recommend them to a crime fiction aficionado. Nothing is solved, the stories stop and some observations about the human condition have been made. The first of these two stories, some fifty pages, is a reverie by a dying detective, who is on his last case whilst reflecting on life, death, and setting about some of the things one might do in the face of a rapidly and permanently closing window of time.

The second story, One way or Another, is the more substantial of the two, around one hundred pages. An artist happens upon a most peculiar hotel, run by priests and about to host some of the movers and shakers (as they would no doubt now be called) of Italy. Industrial and political leaders rubbing shoulders with cardinals. It's a yearly spiritual retreat. Fine food is eaten, the best wine drunk and five mistresses are lodged there, though they never appear in company. Deaths - murders - begin to take place. But whereas in the average murder mystery such occurrences are at the heart of the story, here they are - not incidental - but merely part of the story. The priest who organises the event and the curious artist who is permitted to stay, verbally joust with each other throughout. Interesting thoughts about religion consequently abound. Poirot it is not.

I suspect that both of these stories may be allegorical, but I'm way too literal to get that. On a concrete level, Sciascia deals with the realities of institutionalised corruption in Italy. Can one do that and be allegorical as well? I don't know.

rest here: https://alittleteaalittlechat.wordpress.com/2019/01/12/the-knight-and-death-one-... ( )
  bringbackbooks | Jun 16, 2020 |
näyttää 3/3
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From the acclaimed author of Day of the Owl, The Wine Dark Sea and The Moro Affair.

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