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Excursion to Tindari (Montalbano 5)

Excursion to Tindari (Montalbano 5)

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Author: Andrea Camilleri
Publisher: Picador
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £1.15
You Save: £6.84 (86%)



New (30) Used (15) from £1.09

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 4043

Media: Paperback
Pages: 320
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 0330493035
EAN: 9780330493031
ASIN: 0330493035

Publication Date: July 7, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new copies, with fast U.K. delivery. Delivering to Europe in 3-7 workings days. Delivering to U.S.A. in 7-12 working days.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Excursion to Tindari
  • Hardcover - Excursion to Tindari (Montalbano 5)
  • Audio CD - Excursion to Tindari
  • Paperback - Excursion to Tindari
  • Paperback - The Excursion to Tindari: An Inspector Montalbano Mystery (Wheeler Large Print Book Series)
  • Paperback - Excursion to Tindari

Similar Items:

  • Voice of the Violin (Montalbano 4)
  • Rounding the Mark (Montalbano 7)
  • The Terracotta Dog
  • The Paper Moon (Montalbano 9)
  • The Patience of the Spider (Montalbano 8)

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Such a joy   October 26, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I love these books. Camilleri writes with such a love of his characters and country and it oozes from every page. Montalbano is so real, a rough and ready cop, a fighter for human dignity and the old school way of doing things, butting up against nodern technology and corruption and taking it head on. In this book, an elderly couple go missing after an organized day trip and Montalbano is sent to investigate. Their seemingly ordinary lives start to unravel and Montalbano is there to pick up the pieces and restore order.


5 out of 5 stars Exquisite Mysteries, Little Personal Plots, Tiny Pleasures, and Sardonic Humor   August 15, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Excursion to Tindari has some of the best humor based on human elimination since Rabelais. Who else but Andrea Camilleri would indulge his character development in such an imaginative and earthy way?

An ongoing theme in the book is the troubled nature of love between men and women. You will find the exposition to provide much room for chuckles and smiles.

The mysteries are subtle and puzzling . . . with the ultimate causal strings well hidden until near the end. Those who love challenging mysteries will feel well rewarded.

Ultimately, Excursion to Tindari is more character development about Inspector Montalbano than it is a mystery. But the book is much more mystery, if you look only at that dimension, than all but a few mysteries that will come out in any given year. As someone who loves great character development and difficult-to-solve mysteries, I was in heaven while reading this delightful book.

A young man is assassinated, professional-style, on his doorstep. He comes from a poor family and his work doesn't pay much. Where did he get all those expensive belongings?

An unfriendly elderly couple takes an excursion on a bus to Tindari, and don't even get off the bus until just before the trip ends. After that, no one can find them. What's going on?

A Mafia don tells Montalbano to call on him. Even with great caution, can Montalbano avoid being used for the don's purposes?

In the background, Montalbano is very upset to learn that Mimi Augello, his right hand man, has fallen in love with a policewoman in another town and is thinking about moving. Can anything be done?

The book has only three highlights for Montalbano: His favorite tree provides inspiration and answers; he has an unexpectedly pleasant meal with a beautiful and agreeable young woman; and he can always seem to find some wonderful food to distract him from his annoyances and frustrations.

The contrasts between the inner Montalbano and the public one are nicely and humorously drawn. As always, the politics of the police are displayed in Keystone-Kops-like ways. You could laugh about the funny parts of this book for days.

Bravo to both Andrea Camilleri and his brilliant translator, Stephen Sartarelli!




5 out of 5 stars Exquisite Mysteries, Little Personal Plots, Tiny Pleasures, and Sardonic Humor   August 15, 2007
Excursion to Tindari has some of the best humor based on human elimination since Rabelais. Who else but Andrea Camilleri would indulge his character development in such an imaginative and earthy way?

An ongoing theme in the book is the troubled nature of love between men and women. You will find the exposition to provide much room for chuckles and smiles.

The mysteries are subtle and puzzling . . . with the ultimate causal strings well hidden until near the end. Those who love challenging mysteries will feel well rewarded.

Ultimately, Excursion to Tindari is more character development about Inspector Montalbano than it is a mystery. But the book is much more mystery, if you look only at that dimension, than all but a few mysteries that will come out in any given year. As someone who loves great character development and difficult-to-solve mysteries, I was in heaven while reading this delightful book.

A young man is assassinated, professional-style, on his doorstep. He comes from a poor family and his work doesn't pay much. Where did he get all those expensive belongings?

An unfriendly elderly couple takes an excursion on a bus to Tindari, and don't even get off the bus until just before the trip ends. After that, no one can find them. What's going on?

A Mafia don tells Montalbano to call on him. Even with great caution, can Montalbano avoid being used for the don's purposes?

In the background, Montalbano is very upset to learn that Mimi Augello, his right hand man, has fallen in love with a policewoman in another town and is thinking about moving. Can anything be done?

The book has only three highlights for Montalbano: His favorite tree provides inspiration and answers; he has an unexpectedly pleasant meal with a beautiful and agreeable young woman; and he can always seem to find some wonderful food to distract him from his annoyances and frustrations.

The contrasts between the inner Montalbano and the public one are nicely and humorously drawn. As always, the politics of the police are displayed in Keystone-Kops-like ways. You could laugh about the funny parts of this book for days.

Bravo to both Andrea Camilleri and his brilliant translator, Stephen Sartarelli!




5 out of 5 stars Strongest in the series so far   July 3, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I am working my way through the series and although they are enjoyable, this is the first one to have a real pace and plot. The atmosphere Camilleri draws varies from humorous to menacing with a handy twist of mafia and some human pathos to keep us on our toes. A recommended read.


5 out of 5 stars things are not what they seem   May 27, 2006
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

This novel belongs to the Montalbano series. Comisar Montalbano is a policeman with a hunting instinct: when a case or a clue scratch his instict, he cannot give it up.
In this case, he has to work on two different cases: a young man killed in his doormat and the disappearance of a retired couple which had made a trip to Tindari.
As the research goes on, he is faced with darker and darker findings: the mafia, the fight among the different clans, the new computer-based crimes, the total lack of respect for human life and dignity.
The plot is not the best in the world (and the author doesn't need it either) but the atmosphere captures the reader from the beginning.
The good thing about Camilleri's novels (both Montalbano and the "historical" series)is that they are humorous, ironic, lighthearted, and at the same time bitter, rebel, unsatisfied. Montalbano and his men know that they cannot beat the mafia: it is too deeply engraved in Sicily, its politicians, institutions, in the people. But however they go on working for the sake of decent people, feeling a deep concern for innocence, justice - if only poetic- and truth. Montalbano, an ex rebel of year 68, whose political simpathy leans "neither right nor center" is not very liked by police authorities and has a peculiar love story with a genovese girl friend. He enjoys sicilian cooking, landscape and people. However, the author doesn't fall into italian folklorism.
Camilleri's novels are also a constant homage to his revered master Luigi Pirandello and all the good sicilian writers like his friend Sciascia.
Good read. Unputdownable.