[ilds] wordplay comparable to durrell

csligh Charles-Sligh at utc.edu
Sat Sep 20 06:10:17 PDT 2008


See below for the comparison.  I believe that I recall other reviewers 
making the connection between Dibdin and Durrell.  Please remind us of 
what we should know if you have read Dibdin's works.

Enjoy!

CLS

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La dolce setting for British mystery writer Michael Dibdin
--------------------

With the Aurelio Zen detective series, the late author probed Italian 
regions, politics and culture like a native.

By Scott Timberg
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

September 20 2008

One of the fascinating things about the hard-boiled tradition is its 
geographic flexibility. Writers all over the world have taken the form, 
altered it to suit their times and temperaments and made it at home 
almost everywhere.

The peripatetic Michael Dibdin -- who died last year, a few days after 
his 60th birthday, and whose final novel, "End Games" has recently come 
out in paperback -- may demonstrate this principle better than anyone.

Born in England's West Midlands and raised largely in Northern Ireland, 
Dibdin settled in Seattle in 1995 and set most of his books in Italy.

His 11 novels featuring elusive, grappa-drinking police detective 
Aurelio Zen dig deeply into the culture and politics of Italy's regions 
and cities. Carl Bromley, who this year wrote a substantial piece in the 
Nation on the author's "dark, ironic but oddly nostalgic vision," 
describes each book as "another piece of the jigsaw puzzle" of this 
alluring and enigmatic country.

Though the novels have been dismissed by detractors as "tourist noir," 
Zen experiences Italy in almost the opposite way that Anglo vacationers 
encounter bella Italia.

"Some of the books begin with a phone call," says Edward Kastenmeier, 
Dibdin's longtime editor at Vintage Books. "And Aurelio Zen is sent to a 
different part of Italy, where he's not wanted, where he doesn't want to 
be and where he's trying to solve a crime that many people would like to 
stay hidden."

Detective novels encourage their heroes to range up and down through 
society, from dark alleys to the villas of the wealthy. They can give 
fuller portraits of a culture than can mainstream novels, which tend to 
focus on a single class, family or milieu.

While certain mystery writers effectively own a city -- James Lee Burke 
and New Orleans, for instance -- and many have set their work in Italy, 
Dibdin is unusual in trying to cover the entire country with 
sociological rigor. Zen must penetrate not only the intricacies of his 
cases but also a succession of local cultures, with their bureaucracies, 
dialects and dueling police forces.

"He was really interested in exploring Italian culture," Kastenmeier 
says, "and he was using the crime novel to do that."

Despite their prevailing noirish tone, the books are anything but 
joyless. Indeed, they range from the deeply grim to the comic.

"He tried to make every book different," notes Tom Nolan, the Ross 
Macdonald biographer who reviewed Dibdin's novels for the Wall Street 
Journal. "There's one modeled on a Mozart opera. That's the kind of 
thing really inventive people do when they write a series. His books 
were in no way ordinary."

The series kicks off with an ingenious combination of tones: "Ratking," 
published in 1988, opens with a series of phone calls without narration, 
as the powerful friend of a kidnapped Perugian industrialist calls a 
Roman senator to pressure him into reviving a languishing investigation. 
The calls move up the chain of command until Zen is dispatched to the 
Umbrian capital.

It's profane, hilarious and, according to Bromley, "better than what 
you'd find in a textbook -- the complexity and the networks and the 
labyrinth. As the conversation climbs through the hierarchy, the 
language changes. He could be a very funny writer."

Zen finds what he calls the misteri d' Italia in almost every corner: 
After "Ratking," the series shifts to Zen's native Venice ("Dead 
Lagoon") and then on to the Piedmont wine country ("A Long Finish"), 
before concluding in Calabria with "End Games." The tone changes novel 
by novel to suit each region's spirit.

But all the books are set in a nation of hidden power, of insularity and 
corruption, of political extremes that stretch from communism to 
neo-fascism. Today's Italy, Zen muses in the sinister 2003 novel 
"Medusa," is a "new culture of empty slogans, insincere smiles, and 
hollow promises," a country, as Bromley puts it, entirely without consensus.

Zen is a spectral presence in some of the books, and he often begins 
reluctantly. "Doing his job puts him in peril," says Nolan, *who 
compares Dibdin's wordplay to that of Lawrence Durrell and Vladimir Nabokov.
*
For Bromley, Zen is "a perpetual outsider wherever he ends up." The same 
could be said for Dibdin: Growing up in Belfast certainly would be a way 
to see the dangers that difference -- as well as group loyalty -- brings.

Dibdin taught English in Perugia as a young man and surely got a lesson 
in bureaucracy. He made his debut in 1978 with "The Last Sherlock Holmes 
Story" and moved to Seattle decades later to be with mystery novelist 
K.K. Beck, his third wife. He lived like a perpetual foreign correspondent.

The author was no stranger to acclaim: He was consistently well 
reviewed, and his fans included English mystery queen Ruth Rendell, who 
called "Ratking" "both subtle and horrific," and Ian Rankin, the 
Scottish crime novelist who said Dibdin's works led him to make his own 
books more political.

But Dibdin never generated the attention in the States that he did in 
Britain or Ireland, where his death was marked with enormous press 
coverage and a lead Guardian editorial saying he'd done as much as 
Silvio Berlusconi to reveal Italy's dark heart.

Rather, this tall, hat-wearing Brit with large appetites kept a low 
profile in Seattle.

"He was a bit aloof from the industry as a whole," Kastenmeier explains, 
"and aloof from the mystery community. He didn't relish playing the 
games to become successful; we didn't send him on the road a lot."

Bromley considers Italian crime writing among the most lively in the 
world today and thinks Dibdin helped attract international attention.

But it's a bittersweet consolation to know that we can read more work 
from the country Dibdin took such pleasure in carving up, and that he 
left 18 novels of his own.

Bromley imagines Zen going into retirement and taking up a hobby, much 
as Sherlock Holmes adopted beekeeping, before boarding a train, lured 
out of retirement for a big case. But then what?

"I wish Dibdin had the chance to finish the series on his own terms," he 
says, "rather than having the Grim Reaper do it for him."

scott.timberg at latimes.com



The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/europe/la-et-dibdin20-2008sep20,0,5171758.story 


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