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E-grāmata: Death and the Dolce Vita: The Dark Side of Rome in the 1950s

3.28/5 (63 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Jul-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Canongate Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780857860491
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 15,95 €*
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Jul-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Canongate Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780857860491

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On 9 April 1953 an attractive twenty-one-year-old woman went missing from her family home in Rome. Thirty-six hours later her body was found washed up on a neglected beach at Torvaianica, forty kilometres from the Italian capital. Some said it was suicide; others, a tragic accident. But as the police tried to close the case, darker rumours bubbled to the surface. Could it be that the mysterious death of this quiet, conservative girl was linked to a drug-fuelled orgy, involving some of the richest and most powerful men in Italy? It was a crime that the newspapers, the public and one particularly determined detective wanted to get to the heart of.

The short life and tragic death of Wilma Montesi was played out against a fascinating backdrop. By the 1950s Italy, in the wake of Mussolini's brutal Fascist government, was in the process of reinventing itself. And with the help of Hollywood stars such as Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck, it seemed to be succeeding. Suddenly Italy, and Rome in particular, was the most glamorous place on earth. But the murder of Wilma Montesi exposed a darker side of Roman life - a life of corruption, cover-ups and carnal pleasures.

In Death and the Dolce Vita the distinguished cultural historian Stephen Gundle uses the gripping and tragic story of Wilma Montesi to explore the fascinating contradictions of this most complex country.

Recenzijas

A brilliant, methodical investigation of a murder scandal that convulsed the Roman political and social establishment in the 1950s. * * Financial Times * * Death and the Dolce Vita, a hybrid of history and police detection, brilliantly recreates the details of the Montesi affair...as well as being a thriller, [ it] provides an excellent account of the virtues and misdeeds of Europe's most foxy political class. -- Ian Thompson * * Guardian * * An intense, claustrophobic narrative of murder, mystery and scandal worthy of a Verdi opera . . . a page-turning narrative that explores its extraordinary characters and even more extraordinary cover-ups, evasions and dissemblage, reaching to the top of Italian political life. * * Scotsman * * This is microcosmic history at its most effective: Gundle finds big stories in the small print, teasing out the implications for city and nation of this darkly glamorous demi-monde of starlets and playboys, gossip columnists and - paparazzi. -- Boyd Tonkin * * Independent * * Gundle traces a path through the labyrinth of investigation, cover-up and conspiracy theory that followed to show how the peculiar death of a respectable, unassuming carpenter's daughter came to develop into one of the great scandals - and unsolved mysteries - of the Fifties. * * Daily Telegraph * * What Gundle captures so magnificently is how the case shed light on the intersection between the stars of public life and the dark underbelly of post-war Rome. -- Ben Felsenburg * * Metro * * An incredible story and a must-read for crime novel fans. * * Press Association * * Captivating from the first page ... A tragic case, long-forgotten, has been skilfully resurrected in this brilliant expose of murder and scandal. * * We Love This Book * * A must-read for crime novel fans. * * Oxford Times * * A dark, dramatic true-crime story. * * Saga * * Gundle's intellectual energy and his capacity for research has produced a book that vibrates with the peculiarities of post-war Italy, particularly those of Rome. It is a powerful, convincing recreation of a time and a place. * * Glasgow Sunday Herald * * Inspired . . . the whole gloriously unimproving narrative provides the essential backstory for the Berlusconian bunga-bunga of Italy in our own day. * * Literary Review * * There is unlikely to be a more thorough and diligently researched account of the scandal than this one. * * Spectator * * What [ Gundle] has done is brilliantly reconstruct the evolution of a conspiracy theory * * Daily Express * * Thrilling . . . This is a fascinating story, full of intrigue, gossip, fascinating detail and surprising twists. But it is what Gundle does with the story that makes this such a good book . . . written with verve, this book is hard to put down - but it is also a classic Italian giallo (murder mystery), in which the authorities seem as dodgy as the accused. * * TLS * * An engrossing whodunit -- Bill Jamieson * * The Scotsman * * A page-turning narrative that explores its extraordinary characters and even more extraordinary cover-ups... each unravelling thread leads to more knots and more tangled mysterious threads -- Bill Jamieson * * The Scotsman * * Gundle has pulled off a stunning coup... the term 'eroticism of detail' could have been made for this book -- Bill Jamieson * * The Scotsman * * Gundle is a brilliant writer and makes you feel as if you're reading a fictional crime novel * * Eastern Daily Press * * An incredible story... a must-read for crime novel fans * * Eastern Daily Press * *

Dramatis Personae ix
Prologue 1(10)
Part One
I The Body on the Beach
11(12)
II The Rumour Mill
23(12)
III Politics and Scandal
35(12)
IV Via Margutta
47(11)
V Hollywood on the Tiber
58(16)
VI Girl About Town
74(15)
VII The Marchese of San Bartolomeo
89(8)
VIII New and Old Rome
97(14)
Part Two
IX Muto on Trial
111(22)
X A New Investigation
133(21)
XI Via Veneto
154(13)
XII Piccioni's Alibi
167(12)
XIII The Establishment Fights Back
179(7)
XIV A Family Under Stress
186(15)
XV The Long Arm of the Mafia
201(15)
XVI Dr Sepe Reports
216(13)
XVII The Venice Trial
229(38)
Part Three
XVIII The Rise of the Paparazzi
267(23)
XIX The `Sweet Life' on Screen
290(16)
XX Aftermath
306(15)
XXI Keys to the Case
321(22)
Epilogue 343(12)
Bibliography 355(11)
Filmography 366(1)
Notes on Sources 367(15)
Acknowledgements 382(3)
Index 385
Stephen Gundle is an historian with specialist interest in modern Italy. His books include Bellissima: Feminine Beauty and the Idea of Italy and Glamour: A History. Professor of Film and Television Studies at the University of Warwick, he has also lived for many years in Italy, and is a contributor to History Today, Radio 4's Night Waves and the Italian press.