Lindsey Davis
Description
one Fine Day, A.d. 70, Sosia Camillina Quite Literally Runs Into Marcus Didius Falco On The Steps Of The Forum. It Seems Sosia Is On The Run From A Co
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uple Of Street Toughs, And After A Quick And Dirty Rescue, P.i. Falco Wants To Know Why. falco Finds Out That Sosia, The Niece Of A Highly Placed Senator, Holds The Secret To A Stockpile Of Silver Pigs - Ingots Intended For No Good Use. Hoping For Future Favors From Sosia’s Powerful Uncle, Falco Embarks On An Intricate Case Of Smuggling, Murder, And Treason That Reaches Into The Palace Itself. And If He Does Not Tread Lightly, The Treacherous Puzzle Of The Silver Pigs Could Buy Him A One-way Ticket To His Own Funeral Pyre...
publishers Weekly
the Intriguing Premise Of A Detective Story Set In Imperial Rome In 70 A.d. Is Unpredictably Fulfilled By Davis's Hero-gumshoe, M. Didius Falco, An Iconoclastic Young Republican. Falco Rescues The Niece Of A Senator From A Kidnapping Attempt, Is Attracted By Both Her Innocence And The Secret She Keeps Regarding A Silver Ingot (the ``pig'' Of The Title) And Then Stricken When Her Corpse Is Found In A Spice Warehouse. Hired By Her Family To Track Down The Reasons Behind Her Death, Falco Spends The Winter In Britain Working As A Slave In A Silver Mine. Enduring Vividly Depicted Hardship With Customary Sharp-witted Pluck, He Picks Up The Hints Of A Plan To Overthrow Vespasian, The Current Emperor. He Also Meets The Senator's Divorced, Sharp-tongued Daughter, Helena Justina, And Brings Her Back To Rome Where They Work With--and Against--each Other To Bring The Well-developed Plot To Its Satisfying Conclusion. Wisecracking In Ancient Idiom, Falco Seems, Nevertheless, A Recognizably Up-to-date Young Man, One Whose Honor, Humor And Humanity Work Him Quickly Into Reader's Affection. Davis's Story, Though Couched In Period Detail, Rewards As Much For Deft Handling Of Plot And Depth Of Characterization As For Its Historicity. (aug.)
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