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Solea
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Solea
Unavailable
Solea
Ebook229 pages3 hours

Solea

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

“Izzo digs deep into what makes men weep.”
Time Out New York

The third and final installment in the remarkable Marseilles Trilogy (Total Chaos, Chourmo), Solea continues Jean-Claude Izzo’s distinctive brand of vibrant crime writing, skillfully evoking a time and place that has captured the hearts and imaginations of readers the world over. Marseilles’ simmering issues of race, politics, organized crime and big business come to a rolling boil. Ex-cop, loner, would-be bon vivant, Fabio Montale is back and his heartfelt cry against the criminal forces devastating his beloved Marseilles provides the touching conclusion to a trilogy that epitomizes the aspirations and ideals of the Mediterranean noir movement.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherWorld Noir
Release dateMay 9, 2013
ISBN9781787700079
Unavailable
Solea
Author

Jean-Claude Izzo

Jean-Claude Izzo was born in Marseilles, France in 1945. Best known for the Marseilles trilogy (Total Chaos, Chourmo, Solea), Izzo is also the author of The Lost Sailors, A Sun for the Dying, and one collection of short stories, Living Tires. Izzo is widely credited with being the founder of the modern Mediterranean noir novel. He died in 2000 at the age of fifty-five.

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Reviews for Solea

Rating: 3.9838710430107525 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A perfect book. Perfect for an old man in despair, regretting all, surrounded by death, by loss, by machines grinding his world to nothing. Perfect.

    OK, maybe the newspaper article on the mafia was never ending, but a book pretty close to perfect.

    Just the thing to give that cherry, hopeful neighbor, to knock him down so you two can brood and quietly kill a liquor bottle or two.

    Just the thing to read before you die.

    Whatabook
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Solea is as Noir as they come, although I make that claim as one who reads only occasionally in the genre. Reportedly, despite pressure from Gallimard, his publisher, Izzo rejected the idea of continuing his Marseilles Trilogy beyond Solea (a Miles Davis tune appreciated by Fabio Montale, the existentially doomed protagonist / anti-hero of the series). In this final novel, Izzo dispenses with side plots to focus on the Mafia(there are, of course,still several relationships with beautiful & intriguing women, past & present, that preoccupy Fabio). This time, Izzo is not so much concerned with the truands who regularly engage in turf wars & s'entretuent (no satisfying English translation for this verb) & produce much collateral damage as he is with the Big Picture(there is, nevertheless, a cold-blooded throat-slitter this time around). At stake is his friend & former lover Babette's investigation into the Mafia's influence over & corruption of the financial and political systems in France, an influence that borders on complete takeover. The evidence that she has compiled is detailed in a series of computer disks that she sends to Fabio for safekeeping--the last of which, the black disk, goes so far as to name names & reveal bank account numbers. Naturally, Fabio and everyone close to him is at risk. It is safe to say that things don't turn out well & that Izzo ends his series in the most definitive manner. There is no possible sequel.
    It occurred to me while reading Solea, that in our current global financial meltdown, little to no mention has been made of the role, if any, of organized crime, at least not in reference to the United States. I remember the President's Commission on Organized Crime back in the sixties, but like the War on Poverty, except for our obsession with Mexican drug cartels, we seem to have forgotten about more traditional crime syndicates, those which have integrated their operations with legitimate business (one wonders these days, if such a concept still makes any sense at all). To quote Babette (my translation): "As a consequence of tax evasion, the accumulation in tax havens of enormous capital reserves belonging to the largest corporations is also responsible for the growth of the budget deficits of most countries in the West." Considering the current debt crisis in the European Union & the budget deficit in the U.S., this statement in a piece of 1990s' genre fiction is all the more startling. At the end of the novel, Fabio discloses that he has instructed Cyril, a young hacker, to broadcast the contents of Babette's disks across the Internet. Written in the 1990s, this scenario seems now, post- Wikileaks, quite prescient.
    True to genre & true to the character of Fabio Montale, there is excessive consumption of alcohol (one wonders how Fabio manages to function at all!) and cigarettes & much sleep-deprivation. There are fewer compensations and less consolation to be found here than in the previous novels of the trilogy, however. The sea and coast, the cuisine, the incomparable light, music & the city of Marseilles itself, finally, can't tip the scale to the side of Good.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "Once you get to a certain age, you don't make friends anymore. But you still have buddies .... "It's the narrator's voice that made this book an engaging read. The genre as excuse, you might say, for sociological, existential, and social commentary. But since it is in fact a mystery, holding the reader's curiosity and balancing the plot elements so it's possible to unravel the puzzle is important too. And in this regard the number of Izzo's characters cluttered the unfolding story. Still, the protagonist's always intelligent observations held me throughout, even as I lost the various threads.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Third and blackest of Izzo's Marseille novels. Fabio Montale is in an impossible position: a mafia killer is looking for Fabio's friend, the investigative journalist Babette, who has gone into hiding after finding out more than is good for her about money laundering systems and the political links of organised crime. The killer wants Fabio to lead him to Babette, and proposes to murder Fabio's friends one by one until he finds her. Meanwhile, Fabio's despair about the departure of his girlfriend Lole is only getting worse. Not a cheerful, optimistic book, by any means, and the sunny passages in the earlier books about Mediterranean food and music have largely been replaced by excerpts from official reports and newspaper articles about the growth of organised crime in Europe. The message is essentially that if we don't confront the problem, it will destroy our society; but anyone who does try to do something about it had better be prepared to see their own life and everything they hold dear destroyed. I guess Izzo knew he was dying when he wrote this one.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The third and final book in Izzo’s Marseilles Trilogy is a story shrouded in melancholy. Not because it is the last book, or because of how it all ends (Note: if you are looking for a happy ending, don’t read a hard-boiled crime novel). Izzo’s love for Marseilles pervades this story, even more so than in the earlier two books. The overall atmosphere is one of bitter sweet resignation, a eulogy for what has passed and a weeping for what has become (think lone saxophone player playing a sorrowful tune against the backdrop of a “fading to black” purple sky). By book three, Izzo’s characters feel like family. I love Montale’s loner personality, his motherly neighbour Honorine and the bar owners Felix and Fonfon who make up Montale’s very small network of friends. What I also love is the array of iconic women that parade through Montale’s life. They are strong women, all prepared to face life head on and not just accept the crumbs that might be doled out to them. Of course, it is because of a woman that Montale finds himself being dragged against his will back into the bloodbath that is organized crime’s way of dealing with anyone who threatens to rock their boat so I like how it is another woman, Helene Pessayre, the most recent in a string of police captain who have tangled with Montale, who shares Montale’s dream of a Marseilles freed from the clenches of organized crime and corruption. Overall, another solid hard-boiled crime novel and the perfect capstone to Izzo’s trilogy with some surprising themes about the importance of community and friendship.