Literature
Mafia, murderers and other malefactors: Sicily for policemen
Vikas Datta
With
the Cosa Nostra (the original Mafia) in Sicily, the Camorra in Naples and the
Campania region, the 'Ndrangheta in Calabria among others, Italy is a fertile
source for crime fiction - especially police procedurals. Among the genre's
established American and British policemen, the odd Frenchman or two and the
sudden influx of Scandinavians now, their Italian counterparts - Inspectors
Aurelio Zen and Allesandro Cenni, Commissarios Guido Brunetti, Pierro Trotti,
Alec Blume - have also held their own. But there is one problem - none of them
is an indigenous creation.
All are by British/American authors - the lanky, lugubrious Zen owes his
existence to Michael Dibdin, Cenni to American expatriate Grace Brophy, the
conscientious and capable Brunnetti of Venice to longtime American resident
Donna Leon (whose work been translated into various languages except Italian -
at her request), Trotti in northern Italy to Timothy Williams and Blume, of
American background, in Rome to Conor Fitzgerald.
But Italian authors have not been remiss!
Policeman-turned-novelist Michele Giuttari's nearly-autobiographical creation -
Chief Superintendent Michele Ferrara of Florence - figures in half a dozen
adventures, Maurizio de Giovanni's tormented Commissario Ricciardi in 1930s
Naples in at least five novels, Marco Vichi's Inspector Bordelli in Florence of
the 'Swinging Sixties' also has five appearances so far, Valerio Varesi's
Commissario Soneri in three till now and Andrea Camilleri's Inspector Salvo
Montalbano in sunny but yet dark Sicily in 18 novels (in English that is - at
least five more novels and several collections of short stories exist
untranslated).
Not only by volume but in approach too, the works of Camilleri (1925-) are most
engaging, combining engrossing mysteries verging on the macabre and noir with
pointed social and political commentary (Silvio Berlusconi and his brand of
politics is a frequent target), as well as subtle observations on loneliness
and aging but still managing to maintain a light, even comic, touch.
Then, they can boast of some singularly unforgettable characters right from the
quirky Montalbano himself. The good inspector, whose name is a homage to
Spanish mystery writer Manuel Vazquez Montalban, is a "loose cannon"
for most of his bosses but efficient in his odd combination of lethargic
cynicism and active commitment, and has equally idiosyncratic colleagues - the
amorous Mimi Augello, Fazio of the "record office complex", the
police station receptionist Catarella, who can't remember names or numbers
without mangling them but is a computer whiz, and the irascible pathologist
Pasquano and more.
Then there are the bosses - pompous new Commissioner Bonetti-Alderighi and
sex-crazed prosecutor Tommasino, long-time, long-distance girlfriend Livia
(they squabble every night over phone), his confidante Ingrid whom he saves
from being framed, his journalist friend Nicolo Zito, enemy journalist Pippo
Ragonese and a host of other endearingly, eccentric characters.
The Montalbano series was already a hit in Italy well before it appeared in
English, courtesy translator Stephen Sarterelli, who has brought out perfectly
Camilleri's mix of Italian, Sicilianised Italian and Sicilian dialect.
Starting with "The Shape of Water" (2003), the canon includes
"The Terracotta Dog" (2004) (one of the best where Montalbano is more
keen to solve an old mystery than his current case), "The Snack
Thief" (2004), "The Voice of the Violin" (2005), "Excursion
to Tindari" (2006), "The Scent of the Night" (2007),
"Rounding the Mark" (2007), "The Patience of the Spider"
(2008), "The Paper Moon" (2008),"August Heat" (2009),
"The Wings of the Sphinx" (2009), "The Track of Sand"
(2011), "The Potter's Field" (2012), "The Age of Doubt"
(2012), "The Dance of the Seagull" (2013), "Treasure Hunt"
(2013), "Angelica's Smile" (2014), and "Game of Mirrors"
(2015) - "Blade of Light" should come out late next month.
They deal with some gruesome, unconscionable crimes - murky politics, Mafia
depredations, unexplained murders, financial scams, organ harvesting, human
trafficking, and the like, but the deft hand of the inspector is always present
to achieve, in his decidedly unorthodox way, justice - of sorts.
And then the gastronomy - the entire series is permeated with lyrical
descriptions of the choicest Sicilian cuisine, well suited for someone who
"stopped in front of the restaurant where he'd gone the last time he was
in Mazara. He gobbled up a saute of clams in bread crumbs, a heaped dish of
spaghetti with white clam sauce, a roast turbot with oregano and caramelized
lemon, and he topped it all with a bitter chocolate timbale in orange sauce.
When it was all over, he stood up, went into the kitchen and shook the chef's
hand without saying a word, deeply moved".
So, if you like your tastebuds to be tickled along with your brain cells,
Montalbano is your man!