This is the first book I read by this author. I believe that I will not touch another one in a long time. It does not even have the redeeming quality of well delineated characters.Death in Florence The question of how responsible we are for the fates of others occupies the center of this Marshall Guarnaccia tale, set in Florence. When Sara Hirsch comes to the marshall in a state of terrible fear and anxiety because someone has been entering her apartment in her absence, he promises to come to see her. He is prevented from doing so as promptly as he would have liked; the scene in which he finally approaches her building is a masterly rendering of the experience of precognition. Needless to say, he finds her dead. His search for the reason for her death is gradually woven into the resolution of other situations in his territory, including a theft at the palatial home of a wealthy English art collector and the fate of a beautiful, young, and pregnant Albanian prostitute. The Marshal is a very humane man, and very good at his job. It is a pleasure to spend time with him.
Feeling guilty, he makes inquiries into the deceased. He learns she was impoverished, but expects to make fortune when a Monet that the Nazis stole from her family was soon to be returned to her. Allegedly a half-brother possesses the art treasure. However, before he can track down the missing masterpiece, Guarnaccia learns that someone also killed Sir Christopher, whose villa robbery made Salvatore arrive too late to help Sara. As he keeps digging, he finds a link between the two deaths, but so far unable to determine who wanted both dead.
The Guarnaccia police procedurals are some of the sub-genre's best. Readers get a taste of Italian law enforcement through the methodical Guarnaccia, a tremendous lead protagonist. SOME BTTER TASTE is a strong entry as the cleverly deigned who-done-it is more personnel than usual for the quiet hero. Anyone who reads this novel or any of Magdalen Nabb's works will go away with a sweet taste desiring more novels by a superb mystery author.
Harriet Klausner
Praise for Magdalen Nabb:
"Magdalen Nabb is so good she's awesome."-Philadelphia Inquirer
"First rate. Engrossing, artful and -completely satisfying. Nabb is a fine writer."-Frank Conroy
"Elegant of style and elegant of mind."-Publishers Weekly, starred
"Nabb is formidable."-Houston Post
An elderly woman is found dead in her apartment. The marshal's search for the villains brings him into confrontation with the past, with Jewish refugees from fascism, and with an English expatriate.
Magdalen Nabb was born in Lancashire. She has lived in Florence since 1975.