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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The Final Book in the Marseilles Trilogy
Ex-cop, loner, Fabio Montale returns in this stunning conclusion to Jean-Claude Izzo's Marseilles trilogy. Italian Mafiosi are hunting journalist-activist Babette Bellini, and the body count is growing as they close in on their prey. In desperation, Bellini seeks help from her former lover, Montale. Before he has time to shake off his most recent hangover, Montale is receiving sinister phone calls from men with Italian accents who want him to find Bellini for them. Like a woman he can't leave, like strong liquor he can't refuse, Marseilles lures Montale back into its violent embrace.
This is a Marseilles that will break your heart. A modern city and an ancient Mediterranean port, a melting pot of ethnicities and a cauldron boiling with human passions, a place of natural splendor and of sudden violence.
Solea is Izzo's heartfelt cry against the criminal forces corrupting his beloved city. It is his farewell to Marseilles and to its ideal protagonist, Fabio Montale. It concludes an unforgettable trilogy that epitomizes the aspirations and ideals of the Mediterranean noir movement.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 23, 2007
      I
      n Izzo’s taut concluding volume to his memorable Marseilles trilogy (after 2006’s Chourmo
      ), former cop Fabio Montale is still struggling to find a purpose in the wake of his leaving the police force. Despite his pessimism, Montale allows himself to hope again after he falls hard for a woman named Sonia he meets in a bar; noir fans will be less than surprised that the flicker of romantic promise is quickly extinguished—in this case by a Mafia hit man targeting Montale and people he cares for to get him to divulge the location of his journalist friend, Babette, who’s written an exposé detailing mob links with politicians and the police. Babette’s sophisticated analysis of organized crime’s effect on the working classes, plus Izzo’s unsparing treatment of his cynical hero, elevate this far above most Mafia-themed fiction.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2007
      The concluding volume of the late Izzos Marseilles trilogy remains utterly uncompromising in its allegiance to the classic noir worldview. Fabio Montale, the embittered former cop, sees nothing but misery in his own future and in the future of his beloved city, but he still tries to protect those he loves from similar fates. Ah, but in a noir world, any spot of tenderness is a point of vulnerability, and sure enough, the Italian Mafiosi, desperate to silence Montales former lover, investigative journalist Babette, target Fabios friends as the way to pry from him the information they need. There is a eulogistic tone to this novel, not only because it is Izzos last, but because he seems to be saying farewell to possibility, farewell even to the idea of constructing a separate peace out of harms way from the world. A Jim Thompsonlike endingserved with Izzos no-frills lyricismpretty well seals the deal: Could you draw the curtains on our life? Im tired. The sun shines brightly in Marseilles, but Izzos Mediterranean noir is as dark as noir can get.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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