Riccardo Salati went misisng fifteen years ago but, as there was no evidence to suggest foul play, his disappearance never triggered much of a police investigation. Now his mother Silvia has died and suddenly Riccardo's living or dead status becomes a key factor in executing her estate. Enter Castagnetti, private investigator, hired by estate solicitor Crespi to finally pronounce on Riccardo's fate.
A comment on the book's cover. It's a monochrome atmospheric picture of a Venice backwater and wherever this story is set in northern Italy it is not Venice. That's just treating the reader as either disinterested or dumb, I'm slightly annoyed at that inattention to detail.
The plot is set out clearly, just why is Salati's fate so important, who are the family players and why specifically has Castagnetti been called upon of all the private investigators available. So far, so good. The cast is developed and Jones does a pretty good job of getting us to respond to characters we like or don't like, beginning to ask questions of what really happened to Riccardo when he failed to board his train all those years ago. After that, the pace is steady, never reckless, and the story that unfolds is believable. I do question whether Italian society and the justice system really allows a private investigator to stomp around a case, work in and out of the police investigation so freely, bully witnesses and generally take over. I have not seen such a state of affairs reflected in any other writer's work so I'm inclined to believe this is a fantasy and weakens my belief in the story overall.
Meanwhile I really found Castagnetti a thoroughly dislikeable person. He has no scruples about trampling all over people's emotions, young and old, in fact as he says himself he prefers bees to people. My strong dislike of the central character meant I had no emapthy with his task of finding the solution. Castagnetti is not Philip Marlowe or Sam Spade or Aurelio Zen, the writing is not that good and neither is the Castagnetti character. I do believe Jones has written with television or film in mind and that has detracted from simply focusing on writing a novel. Perhaps that's also why Castagnetti is such a thoroughly dislikeable person, he dislikes people and I dislike him. That's why his only way of getting people to open up or do what he wants them to is to bully them, an approach he even extends to the police.
If Tobias Jones can turn his private investigator into a worthwhile character then other stories could follow, but as things stand, I really don't want to follow Castagnetti any further.