The Italian Couple
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
Colonel Francesco Ferrazza, a disciplined and inflexible Royal Italian Army officer with Italy’s Fascist Military Information Service, and his attractive British wife, Emilia, are posted to Asmara affectionately referred to as ‘Little Rome’ by Mussolini. The colonel is a familiar figure at the military casino and bordello where he brags at the bar he can bend a fireplace poker in half. But he is astonished when in 1938 he is ordered by his Rome superior to set in motion an unusual but clandestine sabotage operation of the engineering marvel that is the Asmara-Massawa cableway that links Italian Eritrea to the sea.
Built by the Italians it is the longest aerial line of its kind in the world but it is of such strategic importance the army comes to realize they may have made a strategic mistake in constructing it. They fear it could fall into the hands of neighboring Ethiopia—whom they defeated in a colonial war just two years ago.
Fearful of the devastating power of exposure Ferrazza sets out to find someone to carry out Operation Red Lion and meets Mario Caparrotti, an amateur race car driver. He plans to compete in the first Christmas Day automobile race through town.
Greedy, boastful, and ignorant, Caparrotti is all of the things the colonel detests in his fellow human beings, civilians in particular. But Ferrazza is desperate to recruit him because he is a cableway mechanic who has unfettered access to the engine room. The colonel entices him with his wife. Prodded by her husband the reluctant Emilia unhappily plays her part by becoming Caparrotti’s lover.
But things begin to fall apart: Caparrotti balks and now also demands significant sums of cash and when the colonel murders a colonial civil servant who has somehow learned of the plot he orders Caparrotti to help him dispose of the body. With the driver more reluctant than ever, and with the deadline drawing nearer, the colonel will do anything to ensure the sabotage is carried out.
Unexpectedly, Gyles Aiscroft, a Rome-based British freelance foreign correspondent, and an old family friend of Emilia’s parents arrives in Asmara. Her father, Edmund Playfair, the senior intelligence officer at the British embassy in Rome, has asked Aiscroft to look in on her. An older man she finds herself drawn to him and confides her plight to him. They embark on a brief, intense affair. But what she doesn’t count on is his falling in love with her and wanting to whisk her off to Capri.
Determined to leave Africa with his mission complete, and with the deadline almost upon him, Ferrazza instructs the resigned and fearful Caparrotti how to go about setting the dynamite charges.
And as the tick-tock of the clock counts down the final hours the colonel belatedly begins to grasp that in ‘Little Rome’ nothing is what it seems, no one can be trusted and, when serving Mussolini, failure will never be condoned.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This suspenseful combination romance and espionage thriller centers on a married couple in despair in Fascist Italy under Benito Mussolini's rule. In 1938, in the city of Asmara, known as Little Rome in the Italian Eritrea colony of East Africa, Col. Francesco Ferrazza, a cagey Italian military information officer, is tasked with Operation Red Lion, a sabotage operation ordered by Mussolini. Through manipulation and enticements, the colonel begins to groom local mechanic and novice race car driver Mario Caparrotti to carry out the destruction; one of the colonel's schemes includes Mario becoming the lover of the colonel's wife, British-born Emilia, who reluctantly goes along with the ruse. The sabotage scheme begins unraveling when Mario demands more money after becoming involved in the colonel's cover-up of a murder, and Emilia begins an affair with Gyles Aiscroft, a British freelance foreign correspondent and part-time intelligence agent working for her father. The novel's pacing is skillful and precise, leading ultimately to an unforeseen and terrifically satisfying ending. Rogers's depiction of Asmara its strategic significance, architecture, and how it was modeled after a typical Italian city, even incorporating a car race with Mario as a driver in the novel's introduction is both a richly visual impression of Rome and a dark reminder of Mussolini's rule. (BookLife)
Customer Reviews
The Italian Couple
Those who follow J.R. Rogers’ novels recognize his signature: little-known settings in far-flung cities that he seems somehow to know intimately, and an intriguing what-could-go-wrong plot of espionage populated with a mix of sophisticated and common characters with varying skills and expertise in advancing the story. While compelled by the intrigue of a fast-moving and unexpected story, the reader always learns new lessons in geography, history, and social interactions typical within a surprising off-the-path setting.
In The Italian Couple, one quickly recognizes Rogers’ signature and eagerly settles into the opening story of a thrilling motor race through the streets of Asmara, Mussolini’s “La Piccola Roma,” (Little Rome) in the Italian colony of Eritrea. Here we meet our first character, Mario Caparrotti, as he skillfully navigates, shifts through the gears, and speeds through familiar streets and corners of Asmara in his red 1934 Fiat 508 Sport Spider. From there we are off as a complex panoply of characters and twisting plot unfold and race toward an unexpected denouement.
Although one always settles in eagerly to Rogers’ signature in the first paragraphs for a good read, it would be a mistake to anticipate formulaic personalities and twists of plot. Rogers does not recycle his novels! Rather, it is a new place, a new slice of history, and a unique set of characters and plot that one races through his pages to discover.
The Italian Couple
Well written. Didn't see the ending coming. Would have liked more exposition. Some things left unexplained.
Worth reading.