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PW Picks: Books of the Week, September 20, 2021

PW Picks: Books of the Week, September 20, 2021
publishersweekly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from publishersweekly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Mystery/Thriller Book Review: Riccardino by Andrea Camilleri, trans from the Italian by Stephen Sartarelli Penguin, $17 trade paper (272p) ISBN 978-0-1431-3679-8

Mystery/Thriller Book Review: Riccardino by Andrea Camilleri, trans from the Italian by Stephen Sartarelli Penguin, $17 trade paper (272p) ISBN 978-0-1431-3679-8
publishersweekly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from publishersweekly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Book World: Five thrillers to read now - and soon

Book World: Five thrillers to read now - and soon Richard Lipez, The Washington Post March 5, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail The Postscript Murders/The Cook of the Halcyon/Dark SkyHoughton Mifflin Harcourt/Penguin Books/G.P. Putnam s Sons/Handout Spring is in the air - and so is intrigue and mayhem - in five first-rate new mysteries and thrillers out this month and next. These twisty, smartly told tales will help put the long, dark winter behind you. - The Cook of the Halcyon, by Andrea Camilleri Before he died in 2019 at age 93, novelist and film director Andrea Camilleri wrote in an author s note that he had adapted the 27th Inspector Salvo Montalbano mystery from an unproduced screenplay. That novel, The Cook of the Halcyon, despite a bloody shootout in the final chapters, is more Buster Keaton than Quentin Tarantino. What makes it especially worth reading - and essential for fans of the series - is the chance to watch the Sicilian next-meal-obsessed, endearingly cranky Mon

Open thread: What books gave you comfort in 2020?

We fill you in on what worked for us. By Aoife Barry Thursday 31 Dec 2020, 9:30 AM Dec 31st 2020, 9:30 AM 13,412 Views 36 Comments Image: Shutterstock/Evgeny Atamanenko Image: Shutterstock/Evgeny Atamanenko A BOOK IS a portal to another place – a way to escape. You can jump into the past, explore the future, or take a sidestep into someone else’s life in just a few pages.  So what with 2020 being, well, the year that it was, it’s no surprise that many of us turned to books to get a bit of a break.  Conal:  “I re-read all of the Montalbano detective series, read Dario Fo’s plays and, most recently, Hannah Arendt’s report of Adolf Eichmann’s trial in Jerusalem which absolutely did not bring me comfort but was very good. Camilleri’s lovable detective Salvo Montalbano is a tonic. The novels transport the r

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