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Bandit Love
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Bandit Love
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Bandit Love
Ebook197 pages3 hours

Bandit Love

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

3/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

Massimo Carlotto has been described as “the reigning king of Mediterranean noir” (Boston Phoenix), “more noir than even the toughest American noir” (Josh Bazell, author of Beat the Reaper), “about as gritty as they come” (The New York Times), and “the best living Italian crime writer” (Il Manifesto). Here, making his American debut, is Carlotto’s most famous and beloved serial character: ex-con turned private investigator Marco Buratti, a.k.a The Alligator.

Closing the door on a crime ridden past, Marco Buratti plans to spend the rest of his days in the darkness of a seedy nightclub sipping Calvados and listening to the blues. But things don’t quite work out as he planned: though he may be through with his past, his past isn’t through with him. When his gangster friend, Beniamino Rossini’s girlfriend is kidnapped, Buratti is forced to investigate a case of international drug dealing. He will be thrown headfirst into the underworld he had struggled to escape. Here, new and old criminal organizations collide and innocent bystanders are as hard to find as straight cops.

Marco “The Alligator” Buratti is not only one of the most fully realized characters in contemporary crime fiction but also the ideal vivisector of a world in which criminals hold all the cards.

“Carlotto is a master of the genre. He keeps the reader on the edge of his seat until the very end with compact, incisive storytelling.”
Il Giornale di Vicenza

LanguageEnglish
PublisherWorld Noir
Release dateOct 31, 2010
ISBN9781787701410
Unavailable
Bandit Love
Author

Massimo Carlotto

Massimo Carlotto was born in Padua, Italy. In addition to the many titles in his extremely popular “Alligator” series, he is also the author of The Fugitive, Death’s Dark Abyss, Poisonville, Bandit Love, and At the End of a Dull Day. He is one of Italy’s most popular authors and a major exponent of the Mediterranean Noir novel.

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Reviews for Bandit Love

Rating: 3.2068965379310344 out of 5 stars
3/5

29 ratings4 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A reasonably satisfying noir, Italian style. I didn't realize it when I bought the book, but it's the fifth in a series. That's not a problem for reading it since Carlotto is good at giving you all the backstory you might need. While I enjoyed it enough to pick up a sixth (if it occurs), I'm not sure if I'll go back and read the first four...my impression is that this book was chock full of what would be spoilers for the earlier ones.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the seventh (?) in a series (others include The Columbian Mule and The Master of Knots) by Massimo Carlotto, a man whose own life would make a fascinating read; charged and convicted with murder, acquited, retried, convicted and sentenced, goes on the run, hands himself in, spends a number of years in jail, only to be finally pardoned after some 18 years battling with the courts to prove his innocence. No wonder he turned to writing crime novels. I had read The Columbian Mule some years ago, thought it ok, nothing more. Like the others in the series, it features Marco Buratti ('the Alligator'), a former blues singer and ex-con turned private investigator. When his close friend Beniamino Rossini's beloved Sylvie is kidnapped, Marco, Rossini and the other of a trio of close friends, Max la Memoria, set out to find and free Sylvie. Her kidnapping may it seems be an effort to punish them for a past criminal involvement. For this is what the book is about - war and revenge between criminal rivals. There are no real good guys in this, in Carlotto's world everyone is tainted, corrupt - police, politicans and criminals alike. Yet a code of conduct, honour, loyalty and friendship are important aspects of the story. Violence is ever present, not a second thought is given to meting out some painful if not fatal retribution. Present too are some of the staples of the criminal world: drugs, smuggling, the sex trade. And it is not only the old Italian criminal world that are involved; make way for some Serbian crooks and Kosovar mafiosi. It is like the old versus the new as the new criminal gangs from Eastern Europe seek a foothold in northern Italy. The books starts out in Padua, but moves to other locations in Italy and to Grenoble in France too, and you have to have your wits about you to keep up with the change in timeline also, as the story jumps between 2004, 2006 and 2008. This to my mind is the least satisfactory aspect of the book. A relatively short novel at only 180 or so pages, it moves apace and a lot happens, maybe too much given its shortness. The characters I found to be the most interesting and pleasing aspect of the book. Without giving anything away (how not to?), the ending is a little sudden and maybe a little surprising. This novel is what might be termed dark noir, and is in stark contrast to the books of another famous Italian crime fiction writer, Andrea Camilleri.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    “This was underworld business: it was a mathematical certainty that it was going to end badly… Somebody was going to die. That was the only thing we knew for sure as the car raced eastward in the night.”It starts with a kidnapping that makes little sense, and moves nonstop into one of the most enjoyable literary treats I’ve read this year. Even though this crime novel is serious business, there’s an air of humor that surrounds a trio of ex-cons and bad guys that are called in to solve the crime. Yep, these guys, having paid their dues as tough guys and retired from that life of crime, now just want to sit back and drink Calvados, eat pasta, and listen to the blues. Except for the lead, Marco Buratti, who also happens to be addicted to home shopping television shows. The action is non-stop as it crosses through Italy and into the Balkans as the three men try to solve two mysteries. They had previously got involved in a hit that went wrong, the moral of which was, “know who you do business for and why before you shoot someone.” Since they didn’t obey that rule, they have to backtrack and solve that before the kidnapped woman can be found.The characters that they run into are just that: characters. Carlotto makes them memorable, with little clues that make them feel much more complicated than just a simple definition of “bad guy”. Drug smugglers have egos and their own tragic flaws, of which these experienced searchers exploit, while at the same time they lament,“Why do Mafiosi always seem to have one useless son?”This leads to an amusing conversation as they analyze The Godfather and The Sopranos to point out just which characters were intellectually-challenged. The rapport between the three is priceless, as they unquestionably back each other up, which would seem unlikely for the world they live in. And what a world that is, when drug smuggling and police corruption is impossibly powerful, with so many innocents thrown into the conflict.I can’t even begin to explain why this book was so much fun, given the subject matter was serious and at times, appalling. Perhaps it’s the universal simplicities that unite everyone-good or bad-the power of a good meal? A view of the sea? The comfort of a regular table at the trattoria?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Marco, Max und Beniamino sind das, was man Ehrenleute nennen würde, würden sie nicht einem kriminellen Gewerbe nachgehen. Marco ist auf das Finden von allem und jedem spezialisiert, Max der kluge Kopf für jeden auch noch so verrückten Plan und Beniamino schmuggelt alles was kommt. Im Gegensatz zu den ersten Beiden schreckt er auch nicht vor Gewalt zurück. Doch allen dreien ist gemeinsam, dass sie nichts mit Drogen zu tun haben wollen. Bei dieser Meinung bleiben sie auch, als ein obskurer Unbekannter sie mit allen Mitteln dazu bringen will, für ihn herausfinden, wer zum einen für den Riesencoup in Padua verantwortlich ist: Ein knapper Zentner Heroin, Kokain und anderes wurde aus dem rechtsmedizinischen Institut gestohlen. Und wo zum andern das Rauschgift geblieben ist, denn alle Ermittlungen verliefen im Sande. Da trotz ihrer Weigerung der Fremde nicht lockerlässt, bleibt ihnen nichts anderes übrig, als ihn ins Jenseits zu befördern. Die Sache scheint völlig vergessen, als zweieinhalb Jahre später Beniaminos Freundin Sylvie entführt wird: Es ist zweifellos klar, dass es sich um einen Racheakt für den ermordeten Unbekannten handelt. Sie machen sich auf die Suche nach Sylvie und landen in einem Netz der Korruption und Intrigen der serbischen und bosnischen Mafia wie auch der Polizei.
    Was Massimo Carlotto hier in gerade mal 180 Seiten abhandelt, wäre bei anderen Autoren noch nicht mal in der doppelten Seitenzahl möglich gewesen. Entsprechend dicht gepackt ist die Handlung, so dass wer Landschafts- oder ausführliche Gemütsbeschreibungen sucht, hier nicht fündig werden wird. Dennoch fühlt man sich mit den drei Hauptpersonen bald vertraut, die Anderen gegenüber auf ihre Art ehrlicher und respektvoller sind als so manches geachtete Mitglied der Gesellschaft. Carlotto lässt Marco die Geschichte erzählen in einer rauhen, ehrlichen Sprache, aber nicht ohne Selbstironie, und so nimmt man ihm und seinen Freunden auch ihre zeitweilige Robin-Hood-Einstellung ab (Spenden an Prostituiertenvereine, Unterstützung Illegaler...) und findet alle nur noch sympathischer :-) Auch an deutlicher Gesellschaftskritik wird nicht gespart, doch sie ist nie überzogen oder penetrant.
    Ein Krimi (?) der alles zu bieten hat: Spannung, Gefühl, Brutalität, Empfindsamkeit, Gnadenlosigkeit und Mitgefühl. Und das alles auf 180 Seiten. Nur ein Manko: 180 Seiten - viel zu wenig. Aber die Weichen für eine Fortsetzung sind schon gestellt...