Tag: book-reviews

Last Testament In Bologna by Tom Benjamin

I originally started this book when it first came out in 2023 but other books (I guess The World by Simon Sebag Montefiore) sidetracked me and I noticed a new book in the series came out recently and it reminded me to revisit this one. It is a series I enjoy an English ex-pat (always ex-pats if they are British, yet Immigrants if they are foreign to us lol) working for the family investigative business in Italy.

This installment focuses on an old feud and the world of fast cars and Formula 1, there is quite a lot going on with several threads and it all comes together quite nicely in the end. I am curious where the series goes next, and how it tackles the patriarchs health and the ever changing family structure like new members and the father/daughter dynamics.

Listening to parts on the audiobook I did notice the narrators voice seemed to change dramatically towards the end of the book. I assume it is the same narrator but he didn’t half sound different.

The Secret of Secrets by Dan Brown

When you read a Dan Brown novel you know exactly what you are going to get. Is it high brow? No. Is it a Dostoyevsky level of human condition? No. Is it thrilling and keeps the pages turning? YES!

This book is no different, our favourite Professor Aquaman is with his “girlfriend”, a beautiful, smart scientist in Prague while she delivers a speech prior to publishing a new book that can change the World on how consciousness is misunderstood. But forces at play wish to keep her quiet and her book un-published. What follows is a day of adventure, danger, violence and a lot of science that goes over this readers. When I got to the end I was surprised that the timeline was only 24 hours!

It was fun for what it was, the best character in the book is probably Prague itself. That is what I enjoy most about DB novels, he really opens up the culture or history of a place to people like myself who know very little and it encourages one to do their own research like for example The Devil’s Bible or Prague Castle and the Door With Seven Locks.

The plot was enjoyable for what it was and a few twists and reveals caught me out. Very cleverly done, some bits far fetched but it a suspension of belief that you make for the sake of entertainment. I found this book better than Origin but it’s not quite at Inferno or Angels & Demons for me.

There isn’t really a true villain in the book except for perhaps Finch and his organisation, there’s lots of grey characters and even the Golem is just delivering justice and is justified in its actions.

And given this little quote from the book

Langdon flashed on the opening line to one of his favourite novels. It is said that in death, all things become clear.

it seems one of Robert Langdon’s favourite books is Digital Fortress by …. Dan Brown.

The Peepshow: The Murders At 10 Rillington Place by Kate Summerscale

An incredibly engrossing read, this was a book I only recently discovered but it is a subject I have been interested in for a long time, since I saw the movie as a teenager. The book follows the trial of the British serial killer John Christie, a man who murdered several women and kept their bodies at his home and garden at 10 Rillington Place. A double whammy being that his upstairs neighbour Timothy Evans was three years earlier tried and hanged for the murder of his wife and daughter. Was Christie guilty of those murders too? That is what this book discusses via the word of writers and journalists of the time, most notably Harry Proctor who was one of the great figures of his day.

The book follows Harry through the Christie trial as feeling misled in 1949 he tries to get Christie to admit to the murders of Beryl and Geraldine Evans, and as a journalist feeling responsible for the potential wrongful conviction of Timothy Evans.

It is very harrowing read and no details left out in the examination of the facts and evidence. I truly believe that Christie did indeed kill the Evans mother and daughter. A botched abortion or excuse to satisfy his fetish of gassing, strangling and necrophiliac rape. The baby being collateral and to silence rumours. Timothy Evans being a naive uneducated man confessed in the moment led on by assurances from Christie.

Christie was rotten from the start and a serial molester and depraved man. A murderer already before the Evans murders. All the facts are clear to see that a massive miscarriage of justice one that was led to stand with evidence and facts withheld until 1992 when the files were made public.

It is a fascinating study in British history and I have no doubts Christie is one of the biggest villians in British history and deservedly so alongside Jack The Ripper. The death penalty existed for animals like him. A man who took advantage of the weak and vulnerable women he befriended.

The book is excellent and one I would highly recommend and afterwards take a deep dive into the case. It is an eye-opening thing and how he got away with it for so long. The facts were there to be found like a human thigh bone propping up a fence, the stench of decay with the bodies hidden under the floor and in alcoves, the fact he was an illegal abortionist.

The case also has spawned an excellent movie from the 1970s 10 Rillington Place starring Richard Attenborough, John Hurt and Judith Geeson. As well as a 2016 television series Rillington Place starring Tim Roth.

This book is a superb study of not just the case but a social history of Britain and London in the early 1950s.