Return to Umbria (Rick Montoya Italian Mysteries Book 4)
Return to Umbria (Rick Montoya Italian Mysteries Book 4) book cover

Return to Umbria (Rick Montoya Italian Mysteries Book 4)

Kindle Edition

Price
$9.99
Publisher
Poisoned Pen Press
Publication Date

Description

David Wagner , a retired Foreign Service officer, spent nine years in Milan and Rome during his career and now writes tourist materials about Italy and mystery novels set in Italy. --This text refers to the mp3_cd edition. "Translator Rick Montoya is in Orvieto to persuade his cousin to return home to Rome when he gets drawn into investigating the murder of American Rhonda Van Fleet. Did Rhonda's past in Orvieto, studying ceramics, lead to her death? The setting almost overwhelms the plot, but Rick is a charming and appealing amateur sleuth." - Library Journal "Wagner skillfully inserts nuggets of local culture without slowing down the narrative pace, and perhaps even more importantly, he gets Italy right. He understands the nuances of Italian manners and mentality as well as the glorious national preoccupation with food." - Publishers Weekly "With taut pacing and enough credible suspects to keep the reader guessing until the end, Return to Umbria makes for an engaging read." - Shelf Awareness --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.

Features & Highlights

  • "Wagner skillfully inserts nuggets of local culture without slowing down the narrative pace, and perhaps even more importantly, he gets Italy right. He understands the nuances of Italian manners and mentality as well as the glorious national preoccupation with food."—
  • Publishers Weekly
  • The most famous cathedral façade in Italy is found in Umbria—a structure of gothic spires, arches, statues, and mosaics. But as translator Rick Montoya discovers, this jewel of Umbria has a dark side
  • When Rick Montoya traveled to his mother's Italy from his father's Santa Fe, New Mexico, to work as a freelance translator using his dual heritage, he didn't expect to be helping the Italian police. His maternal uncle, a high-level commissioner in Rome, however, sees no reason not to use the resources at hand.
  • The trouble begins when Rick is asked by his uncle to go to Orvieto to talk some sense into his cousin Fabrizio, whose fling with an older married woman is embarrassing the family. Rick agrees to give it a try.
  • Less than a day after arrival, his language skills draw him into the brutal murder of an American visitor. The murdered woman had studied art in Italy decades earlier—why has she returned now? And when a second murder occurs in a public park—narrowly missing Rick himself—he can't help but wonder if his family has anything to do with the case.
  • In this addition to David P. Wagner's mystery books, a dark past casts its shadow over the picturesque city of Umbria. Is it possible to right the wrongs of the past and remain unscathed?
  • Other books in the Rick Montoya Italian Mysteries:
  • Cold Tuscan Stone
  • Death in the Dolomites
  • Murder Most Unfortunate
  • Return to Umbria
  • A Funeral in Mantova

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(99)
★★★★
25%
(83)
★★★
15%
(50)
★★
7%
(23)
23%
(75)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Nice visit to Italy

I enjoyed this mystery set in Italy by David Warner. It is the first of the series I have read, and I am sure I will be back for others, although I have to admit, this is more of a travel book than a murder mystery. The landscapes and views around Umbria are very well done, but the characters are flat and not really drawn out. I kept expecting the narrator/hero's girlfriend Betta to be more than a prop, but it never happened.

Still, recommended. Not a bad way to spend a few hours.
1 people found this helpful
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Easy entertaining read

A nice balance of Italian history, architecture, local culture and cuisine and a crime story. Makes for an easy enjoyable read.
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He's no Donna Leon

I read this book while I was in Umbria - I visited Orvieto where most of the book took place. Being in the area added to the experience, but I did not find the book particularly compelling. I cared not at all about the people in the book. I also thought having the "hero" trudge around Orvieto in cowboy boots was kind of stupid. I've read many Donna Leon Italian mystery books - they all take place in Venice, Italy, and describe in wonderful detail life in that city. Also - the mysteries are interesting and very much linked to the goings on in that amazing city. This book was a poor substitute.