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And Then You Die

And Then You Die

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Very Disappointed
Review: After reading two previous books in the Arelio Zen series I was looking forward to bringing this one along on vacation. What a large disappointment this was. The author seems to just cruising along, there is no character development, and no real mystery, and no compelling reason to read it. The book is extremely short - less than 200 pages. Has the author given up, or does he really intend the series to continue? For a mystery series which just seems to get better with each book, read the Ancient Roman series by Steven Saylor.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Very Disappointed
Review: After reading two previous books in the Arelio Zen series I was looking forward to bringing this one along on vacation. What a large disappointment this was. The author seems to just cruising along, there is no character development, and no real mystery, and no compelling reason to read it. The book is extremely short - less than 200 pages. Has the author given up, or does he really intend the series to continue? For a mystery series which just seems to get better with each book, read the Ancient Roman series by Steven Saylor.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A long-awaited entry in a great series
Review: At last Aurelio is back, and better than ever! Aurelio Zen is one of my favorite characters and I heartily recommend ANY books in Michael Dibdin's series about this wonderful Italian "just a common policeman." Locales and backgrounds, as the stories move him around the country, are so richly drawn it's like traveling in Italy while having a great adventure. Plots are never simply black & white, but many layered, and the characters are complex. The previous entry (Blood Rain)caused tremendous consternation among my friends who are also fans: "How could Michael Dibdin do it; do you think he really killed off Aurelio? Trust yourself to Mr. Dibdin's writing skill and climb aboard for great ride. We were so excited when the new book came out we didn't even plan to share copies; we each went out and bought our own--it was worth it. We hope Michael Dibdin is well-started on the next one.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: dark wit prevails
Review: Fans will be pleased to know that Italian detective Aurelio Zen survived the bombing that ended the last book in the series, "Blood Rain," though his life is still at risk as he waits, incognito, to testify at an American Mafia trial. Forced to enjoy a traditional Italian beach holiday, Zen occupies the same beach chair on the same strip of sand each day, conducting a mild flirtation with his beach neighbor, until the people around him - those who take his beach chair, for instance, begin to die.

Dibdin's trademark humor and dark wit is in good form as Zen parries a flirtation and worries about traveling to America, a place the Roman Empire never occupied (so why would anyone else want to?), endures an exile on a prison island and a bizarre side trip to Iceland, "the end of the earth." This book winds up an ongoing plot line in an ingenious, over-the-top twist that sets the scene for the next chapter in Zen's eventful life.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Dazed and Confused
Review: I am an ardent fan of Michael Dibdin and our good friend, Aurelio Zen, and incredibly excited to find another book in the series. Zen lives!

Having said that, I guess I just don't feel this one was quite up to standard (and a very high standard that is). In this book, Zen's adventures seem tongue in cheek. Diverted to Iceland? Criminalpol taken over by a guru of new management practices? Zen being put out to the pasture of "working from home"?

Although the book has elements of farce, now that we know Zen is alive, well and in love again, Dibdin is duty bound to keep 'em coming!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Dazed and Confused
Review: I am an ardent fan of Michael Dibdin and our good friend, Aurelio Zen, and incredibly excited to find another book in the series. Zen lives!

Having said that, I guess I just don't feel this one was quite up to standard (and a very high standard that is). In this book, Zen's adventures seem tongue in cheek. Diverted to Iceland? Criminalpol taken over by a guru of new management practices? Zen being put out to the pasture of "working from home"?

Although the book has elements of farce, now that we know Zen is alive, well and in love again, Dibdin is duty bound to keep 'em coming!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: bizarre
Review: It was the first (and only) book of this author I bought so I cannot judge other readers' claim that the earlier books were better. With this book at least I could not relate at all. A modern days european, middle aged policeman who has never heard of Los Angeles? Who, reading that the city's name derives from an old Spanish mission expects L.A. to be a cosy european-style city inhabited by catholics? Has this man really never heard about riots, the movie "colors", OJ Simpson or Hollywood and should still be considered a credible character? A man who really thinks that, having started from Italy and landing after only three hours flight, he is in L.A. now (instead of Iceland)? This guy could have fallen from another planet, irreal as he comes over. Having read half the book, I just did not care anymore about his further destiny.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: bizarre
Review: It was the first (and only) book of this author I bought so I cannot judge other readers' claim that the earlier books were better. With this book at least I could not relate at all. A modern days european, middle aged policeman who has never heard of Los Angeles? Who, reading that the city's name derives from an old Spanish mission expects L.A. to be a cosy european-style city inhabited by catholics? Has this man really never heard about riots, the movie "colors", OJ Simpson or Hollywood and should still be considered a credible character? A man who really thinks that, having started from Italy and landing after only three hours flight, he is in L.A. now (instead of Iceland)? This guy could have fallen from another planet, irreal as he comes over. Having read half the book, I just did not care anymore about his further destiny.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Disappointing
Review: Michael Dibdin is the author of one of the most delightful of all detective series - the seven splendid Aurelio Zen novels from "Ratking" through to "Blood Rain". The last ended tragically, Dibdin evidently having decided, very reasonably after seven books, that the series had run its course and it was time to move on to something fresher before it went stale. But now here we have Dibdin, for reasons best known to himself, doing a "Return of Sherlock Holmes" and resurrecting his hero. If there was some utterly terrific idea gnawing at him for some untold Zen story that just demanded telling, the resurrection would have carried more conviction. But what Dibdin has in fact given us is by far the slightest and least engaging of the Zen books so far. If you've read the others you'll be keen enough to read this too whatever anyone says. If you haven't, read the others first as they are far better. You'd want, in any case, to read "Blood Rain" first as this book rather presupposes that the reader knows what went on in that one.

We meet Zen at the outset on the beach at the Tuscan resort of Versilia, having made a quite remarkably full recovery from being blown to smithereens in "Blood Rain". The authorities are keeping him comfortably out of the way so he can appear as a witness in a big mafia trial planned in the US, and he seems safe enough, quietly occupied with a spot of womanizing with Gemma, whose acquaintance he has struck up on the beach. Then suddenly someone is murdered and it rather appears Zen is the intended victim. Alarmed, the authorities bundle him off on to a 'plane to America where he will be put on a Federal Witness Protection Program. But he never gets there. He takes a dislike to the businessman in the seat next to that assigned to him and moves. Meanwhile the businessman spreads himself out to occupy both seats. And so he becomes the second person to get himself killed by sitting in the place where Zen should be sitting. Meanwhile a blocked toilet problem has diverted the 'plane to Iceland and the discovery of a corpse delays Zen and the other passengers there long enough at least for Zen to get very drunk and take a huge dislike to the place. It then turns out he won't be needed as a witness after all. One of the defendants has made a deal so he is sent back to Italy to resume his police career.

Two more chapters follow, one in Rome, one back in Tuscany. Didbin is a brilliant writer and it's a witty and engaging enough read. But it doesn't add up to a whole lot. There's no very urgent sense of mystery. Indeed not all that much sense of danger, especially for a book where the protagonist has to deal with five attempts on his life. Even in his womanising, Zen seems to be going through the motions here. And so does Didbin. Why, one wonders, bother to strain our credibility with this resurrection and then do so little with it. The book remains diverting enough to be worth a read if you're a fan. It's far from just a waste of time, no "Alien Resurrection". But I fear it's not exactly "The Adventure of the Empty House" either.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: And Then You Almost Die
Review: The last installment in this series by Michael Dibdin gave fans of this Aurelio Zen series a reason to pause. Zen however is most certainly back, using a variety of names other than his own, as he mends from the bomb that nearly ended his run as one of the better detectives that exist only on paper. The folks that wanted Zen dead have not changed their mind, and in this surprisingly humorous book, a series of bodies fall within a few feet of Zen, victims of occupying the wrong spot on a beach or seat in a plane.

I have read all the books in the series and this newest addition is easily among the best. Zen has shared his life in a hopelessly corrupt and bureaucratic Italy, the occasional girlfriend and his colorful mother. This time we learn more about Aurelio, as he is required to travel to The United States. It is here we learn of Aurelio's classical view of where travel is appropriate; specifically, reasonable places to go are limited to those areas once in control of The Roman Empire. If the Romans never bothered with America, why should he? And to fly across an ocean is simply madness.

His destination is Los Angeles an area he becomes comfortable with seeing because he imagines it as rather a bucolic locale with a great number of Catholics. His rationale for Catholics versus Protestants has less to do with which is better and more to do with the devil you know.

As he has with the other installments of this series Michael Dibdin spins a great tale, maintains the tension and suspense, and essentially misdirects the reader through much of the book. Happily for Aurelio he finds a companion, and they become bound together by a combination of love and bizarre events. I hope this new female character appears again for she is a match for Aurelio, and adds a great new personality to the series.


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