Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book
Rate this book
Already an international hit, a sly, sizzling mystery—the first in a sensational crime series—set in the Italian Alps, reminiscent of the works of Andrea Camilleri, D. A. Mishani, Donna Leon, and Henning Mankell.

Getting into serious trouble with the wrong people, deputy prefect of police Rocco Schiavone is exiled to Aosta, a small, touristy alpine town far from his beloved Rome. The sophisticated and crotchety Roman despises mountains, snow, and the provincial locals as much as he disdains his superiors and their petty rules. But he loves solving crimes.

When a mangled body has been discovered on a ski run above Champoluc, Rocco immediately faces his first challenge—identifying the victim, a complex procedure complicated by his ignorance of the customs, dialect, and history of his new home. Proud and undaunted, Rocco makes his way among the ski runs, mountain huts, and aerial tramways, meeting ski instructors, Alpine guides, the hardworking, enigmatic folk of Aosta, and a few beautiful locals eager to give him a warm welcome.

It won't be easy, this mountain life, especially with a corpse or two in the mix. But then there's nothing that makes Rocco feel more at home than an investigation.

An insightful observer of human nature, Antonio Manzini writes with sly humor and a dash of irony, and introduces an irresistible hero—a fascinating blend of swagger, machismo, and vulnerability—in a colorful and atmospheric crime mystery series that is European crime fiction at its best.

272 pages, Hardcover

First published January 31, 2013

About the author

Antonio Manzini

62 books631 followers
Antonio Manzini (Roma, 1964) è un attore, sceneggiatore, regista e scrittore italiano.

Antonio Manzini is an Italian actor, director, novelist and scriptwriter.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
858 (18%)
4 stars
2,011 (44%)
3 stars
1,338 (29%)
2 stars
266 (5%)
1 star
43 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 541 reviews
Profile Image for Roberta.
1,874 reviews313 followers
September 10, 2015
Grazie, anche no.
Ho scelto questo libro perché cercavo un romanzo ambientato in Valle d'Aosta per finire il mio viaggio in Italia. Vi ho trovato l'ennesimo commissario - pardon: vicequestore - che fa cose, ma male.
Prima di tutto apprendiamo che è romano, ma solo perché ci viene detto: al contrario del collega Montalbano non usa espressioni in lingua, e questa è forse l'unica similitudine che manca, ma che mi sarebbe piaciuta trovare. Non ho sentito, come forse l'autore avrebbe voluto, lo stacco tra la rusticità dell'uomo dell'urbe e la riservatezza dei montanari.
Secondo: di Catarella ce n'è uno solo, inutile sdoppiarlo in una coppia di sbirri un po' lenti per il solo gusto di far apparire due poliziotti simili ai carabinieri delle barzellette. La loro goffaggine non è servita a nulla nell'indagine, avrebbero potuto essere tagliati dalla storia senza che questa ne risentisse.
Terzo: sarà che l'ho letto poco dopo la sentenza sulla Diaz, ma un poliziotto che picchia un sospettato per fargli uscire sangue dal naso e poterlo analizzare è semplicemente, banalmente triste.
Quarto: poliziotti anziani corrotti e giovani corruttibilissimi che rubano ai trafficanti. Perché lo stipendio da poliziotto è così basso che è indispensabile, per poter vivere, vendere droga nel tempo libero.
Quinto: la legge sono io e me ne sbatto. Neanche nei peggiori bar di Caras. 'Sto commissario è un burino e basta, quel genere di poliziotto che se vede uno scippatore menare una vecchietta per rubarle la borsa volta la testa dall'altra parte perché intervenendo non avrebbe alcun guadagno personale

Insomma: è un ottimo racconto verista italiano.

Non so... ci sono tanti gialli e thriller in giro, come può fare un autore a rendere la propria saga diversa dalle altre? Come ha fatto Camilleri a creare personaggi come Montalbano, Fazio e Augello, di cui il lettore si innamora? Ma anche comprimari come il dottor Pasquano, Ingrid, persino Bonetti-Alderighi, che rimangono immpressi da subito. Qui c'è solo uno sborone che, per caso, fa il poliziotto e che, per obbligo, deve risolvere un caso mentre truffa e minaccia e tenta di pucciare il biscotto. Non si salva nemmeno il gesto umanitario del "salvatagggio" dei cingalesi, perché se ci pensate bene li porta a destinazione solo per avere un problema in meno da gestire e poco gliene cale delle mani in cui finiranno questi clandestini. Dubito verranno trattati e nutriti come a casa della signora Ginevra: lei e il marito sono stati l'unica macchia di colore della storia.

Chiudo come ho iniziato: ma anche no. Ci sono tanti altri rappresentanti della forza pubblica che meritano, dal classico Maigret al più moderno Grissom.
Profile Image for Paul Ataua.
1,812 reviews209 followers
November 18, 2022
There is everything to hate about Rocco Schiavone. The corrupt, crotchety, foul mouthed, chain smoking detective who was run out of his hometown Rome to find himself marooned in the mountain villages of Aosta. Here he lives out his levels of hell. In ‘Black Run’, he is investigating a murder that took place on the ski slopes, and we follow him as he draws his inferences from the few clues left after the body has been mutilated by a snowplow. It is, however, not the murder case that is central here, but Schiavone himself, and I can’t help thinking that he is meant to be seen more as a reflection of society he came from than just an individual. It’s a society that is not perfect but is at least honest about its own faults and feelings, and for all its roughness, there is caring deep down inside. I quite enjoyed this book and will move onto the second in the series in time.
Profile Image for Nancy Oakes.
1,989 reviews849 followers
Read
August 29, 2015
On the back cover, there's a blurb by Andrea Camilleri which reads

"Manzini devotes more space to his characters than to events, and the detective story is a pretext for talking brilliantly about Italian society."

and I would have to agree with him wholeheartedly. Set in the alpine mountains of Val D' Aosta in Italy, the book starts with a gruesome scene as a snocat operator is making his way in the dark down a mountain ski track heading into the village of Crest at the Champoluc ski resort. He's singing out loud, "hitting the high notes," while cheerfully listening to Ligabue on the radio. Suddenly, he realizes that the snocat has hit something. He gets out, and notices feathers being blown about by the wind. Still uncomprehending, he walks on, until he runs into an "enormous" red stain, "churned into the white blanket of snow." The next look he takes has him throwing up -- and this is where we meet Deputy Police Chief Rocco Schiavone, who is awakened during a sound sleep and sent out to have a look. The discovery of a mangled body puts Schiavone in charge of a case that has any number of potential suspects once the dead person is identified.

Schiavone is not, I repeat NOT, your typical crime-solving Chief Inspector. For one thing, he has this bizarre habit of meeting a person and giving them some sort of animal equivalent in his head, genus, species, order, suborder. He's prone to ridicule those who serve underneath him if he finds them lacking. He is a definite ladies' man but at the same time, comes off as a misogynist; he is also prone to using violence or threats as a means of putting fear into people. He scoffs at the people of Val D'Aosta as they seem to be beneath him somehow, and quite frankly, he's crooked. Everything gets compared to Rome, where he'd previously worked before he was sent seemingly into exile where he is right now. The story of what happened in Rome has to wait until later in the story, but when it comes out, it does sort of give you an idea of why he became what I called an "asshat" in my reading status updates. However, he is very, very good at what he does even if you don't agree with his methods or you don't think that's how cops ought to work. By the end of the book, I actually felt kind of sorry for the guy.

In coming to understand him, something popped out at me right as the book was about to end, where the author describes him as someone who was
"...struggling to leave behind the ugliest things he'd lived through. Who was trying to forget the evil committed and the evil received. The blood, the screams, the dead -- who presented themselves behind his eyelids every time he shut his eyes."

He often finds himself in "a swamp," which "was always there," where
"... the boundary between good and evil, between right and wrong, no longer exists. And there are no nuances in the swamp. Either you plunge in headfirst or you stay out. There is no middle ground."


While the mystery itself is kind of run of the mill, as far as the bigger picture goes as Camilleri states, the focus is all on the characters. As he also notes, Manzini doesn't hesitate to draw attention to problems in "Italian society," which I'll leave the reader to discover. The bottom line to me is that while it is definitely tough to warm up to Schiavone until you see where he's coming from, I'm drawn way more to character than to plot so Black Run is most definitely in my wheelhouse. Personally, I think that readers who've given low ratings to this novel are looking more for a thriller sort of thing that they didn't get and that perhaps they've sort of misunderstood Manzini's emphasis on his main character. Oh well. I thought it was a fine debut series novel and I will definitely be waiting for the next one.
Profile Image for Dana Pencu.
82 reviews13 followers
June 8, 2017
Αυτο το βιβλίο αξίζει να διαβαστεί μόνο και μόνο για τον μοναδικό χαρακτήρα του υποδιοικητή Ρόκκο Σκιαβόνε! Αν και διεφθαρμένος,αυτάρεσκος και σεξομανής, έχει πολύ έξυπνο χιούμορ. Πολύ ευχάριστο αστυνομικό μυθιστόρημα. Η υπόθεση είναι λίγο κλισέ και προβλέψιμη αλλά οι ατάκες του Σκιαβόνε, το παγωμένο και πανέμορφο τοπίο των ιταλικών Άλπεων με έκαναν να νοσταλγήσω και να χαμογελάσω πολλές φορές.
Profile Image for Tim Orfanos.
353 reviews37 followers
May 23, 2019
Λοιπόν, ο Μαντζίνι, ενδεχομένως, να έχει δημιουργήσει τον λιγότερο συμπαθή βασικό ήρωα αστυνομικών μυθιστορημάτων, τον υποδιοικητή Ρόκκο Σκιαβόνε, ο οποίος είναι υπέρμαχος της ρήσης 'Ο σκοπός αγιάζει τα μέσα', καταλήγοντας ουκ ολίγες φορές να 'περνά' την λεπτή διαχωριστική γραμμή μεταξύ νομιμότητας και παρανομίας, αλλά να χρησιμοποιεί, ακόμα, καί τη σωματική βία για να λύσει μια υπόθεση.

Η 'Μαύρη Πίστα' είναι από τα αστυνομικά μυθιστορήματα με πιο έντονα τα 'νουάρ' από τα τα 'καθαρά' αστυνομικά, ενώ πολλοί αναγνώστες θα μπορούσαν να το χαρακτηρίσουν σαν το 'απόλυτο' αστυνομικό μυθιστόρημα της Παγκόσμιας Οικονομικής Κρίσης (2013), αφού, σε πολλά σημεία του βιβλίου, ο συγγραφέας ��εν παραλείπει να καυτηριάζει τις κοινωνικές και οικονομικές αλλαγές που έχει υποστεί η Ιταλία, μετα την κρίση - ο υποδιοικητής Σκιαβόνε έχει προσαρμόσει αναλόγως καί τις εργασιακές τακτικές του.

Το βιβλίο έχει ένα από τα ωραιότερα γυαλιστερά εξώφυλλα αστυνομικών μυθιστορημάτων όπου 'εκπέμπεται' στον αναγνώστη η ειδυλλιακή ατμόσφαιρα των Ιταλικών Άλπεων και του χειμερινού θερέτρου Σαμπολύκ - μια πίστα στο χιονοδρομικό κέντρο του Σαμπολύκ χαρακτηρίζεται στον τίτλο 'μαύρη' λόγω ενός κρυμμένου πτώματος στο χιόνι της.

Το 1ο μέρος του βιβλίου είναι πιο αργό, με εκτεταμένες περιγραφές του τοπίου και του χιονοδρομικού κέντρου του Σαμπολύκ, ενώ το 2ο είναι πιο ουσιαστικό και ενδιαφέρον φέρνοντας στο προσκήνιο 'φλέγοντα' κοινωνικά θέματα όπως η λαθρομετανάστευση, το λαθρεμπόριο όπλων και ναρκωτικών, αλλά καί ο παράνομος χρηματισμός των αστυνομικών - σε αυτό το σημείο, ο Μαντζίνι φαίνεται να κάνει μνεία στον Ίαν Ράνκιν. Ανεξάρτητα από όλα αυτά, ο αναγνώστης θα εκπλαγεί από τον τρόπο διαλεύκανσης του μυστηρίου, αλλά, ωστόσο, θα επισημάνει ότι οι ύποπτοι για τη δολοφονία του Λεόνε Μιτσικέ δεν αναλύονται επαρκώς, αλλά επιφανειακά.

Βαθμολογία: 4,2/5 ή 8,4/10.
Profile Image for Sandra.
943 reviews296 followers
December 30, 2016
La curiosità era forte, da ogni parte ero martellata da ‘sto Rocco Schiavone, ed allora l’ho letto. Deludente. Non è che mi sta soltanto antipatico Schiavone, non lo sopporto. Non mi piace niente di lui, uno “sborone” cafone con i colleghi di lavoro, con le donne, con tutti, tanto da provare un fastidio quasi fisico mentre leggevo di lui e delle sue indagini aostane, al freddo e al gelo. Posso capire il voler creare un personaggio sopra le righe, uno “alternativo”, non il solito poliziotto buono pieno di tante belle virtù che combatte contro i cattivi, capisco e apprezzerei. Ma da qui a costruire un personaggio che insulta tutti quelli che incontra, piglia a schiaffi la gente, fuma gli spinelli dentro l’ufficio (se li fumasse a casa gli spinelli!), tratta le donne da tipico arrogante cafone (con la giustificazione che è traumatizzato perché gli è morta la moglie! Che cavolo di giustificazione è per maltrattare delle persone?), tiene comportamenti illegali lucrando sulle operazioni di polizia a cui partecipa (vogliamo scimmiottare gli scrittori americani tipo Don Winslow? Si tratta di tutt'altro genere, però) … beh a me pare proprio voler esagerare nel cinismo, nel “not politically correct”, tanto da creare un personaggio troppo artefatto ed innaturale, quasi una macchietta!
Non mi dilungo a parlare dell’indagine, il caso da risolvere è l’omicidio di Leone Miccichè, un siciliano trapiantato ad Aosta che gestisce uno chalet a Champoluc con la compagna, trovato morto sotto un mucchio di neve dall’autista di un gatto delle nevi mentre sta pulendo le piste. Non anticipo nulla se non che non ho gradito per niente il modo in cui Schiavone ha scelto di rivelare il colpevole: anche in questo caso una esagerazione che, come il protagonista, sa di fasullo.
Non riesco a salvare nulla di questo personaggio, che, guardando la fiction che hanno dato in Rai, mi pareva un incrocio tra Montalbano e Ricciardi, invece nel libro si è rivelato peggio.
Profile Image for LolaF.
399 reviews355 followers
October 4, 2018
Buen libro. Entretenido

Rescaté este libro del trastero gracias a la recomendación de unas amigas. No hay nada como conocerse para saber acertar en la recomendación de un libro. No es un libro 5*, pero sí el que yo necesitaba en este momento.

He disfrutado dejándome llevar con su lectura y casi me ha gustado más por el juego que dan de sí sus personajes que por la propia investigación del caso: el descubrimiento de un cadáver en las pistas de esquí. La personalidad del subjefe Rocco y la relación con alguno de sus subordinados, ha salpicado la lectura de escenas y frases que como mínimo me han despertado una sonrisa.

Rocco es un personaje un tanto peculiar: un poli corrupto con doble rasero, borde, sarcástico, mujeriego, ... intuitivo y deductivo a la hora de seguir las pistas, aunque no tiene ningún problema a la hora de utilizar métodos poco ortodoxos y saltarse las normas, un tanto inadaptado y amargado porque ha dejado atrás su brillante pasado de casos resueltos en una comisaría de Roma y ha sido trasladado al valle de Aosta, en los Alpes italianos, por haber estado metido en algún asunto turbio. Los testigos y sospechosos que va conociendo le hacen recordar los animales de una antigua enciclopedia. Además tiene una clasificación especial de aquellas cosas que suelen molestarle.

A través del juez Baldi, de sus comentarios y pensamientos va haciendo una crítica social y del sistema político. El juez conoce el pasado de Rocco, mantienen un equilibrio en su relación que sospecho que puede dar mucho juego en los siguientes libros.

Recomiendo su lectura. Ahora, a continuar con la serie ...

Valoración: 7,5/10
Lectura: octubre/18
Profile Image for Irena Pasvinter.
353 reviews89 followers
October 6, 2022
Rocco Schiavone, a grumpy chain-smoking Italian policeman with muddy past, bleak present and uncertain future, first came to my attention due to the popular Italian TV series where he is brilliantly portrayed by formidable Marco Giallini. Soon, being out of new episodes to watch, I decided to explore the novels the series are based on. As I started reading one of the later novels that continued the story where the series had left, I was very happy to discover that it was excellent in its own right. This is a rare case when the creators of detective series didn't have to invent or change anything: the gripping plot, the complicated and misterious protagonist, the hilarious crew of supporting characters, the sparkling dialogue -- all this and more is already right there on the page, masterfully written.

Aosta, now famous not only for Valle d'Aosta ski resorts, but also as the destination of Rocco Schiavone's professional exile.

So what on earth possessed me to listen to "Piste noire" -- the audiobook version of the French translation of the Italian original "La Pista Nera", the first novel in the series? When I first looked for this audiobook, an Italian version simply wasn't available, and the French one was already there. Strangely, the Italian audiobook has only recently been released, read by the author himself, while the English, Italian, Spanish and German versions has been available for a while now. Actually, I have my own hypothesis to explain the weird delay of Italian audiobooks about Rocco Schiavone: Italian readers would surely wanted Marco Giallini who plays Rocco in the series to narrate the audiobooks, and he must have had other ideas. Finally, Manzini himself got to narrating the first book (by the way, although it has been oficially released, this audiobook is still not available on audible.it or audible.com -- another odd mystery of Italian book marketing).

So, I acquired the two first novels in the series as French audiobooks a while ago. As I'm currently on a French tangent (aka urgently resusscitating my spoken French before an upcoming short trip to France), I finally got to listen to Piste noire.

If the original is really good, the translation is bound to be good as well, unless the translator botched his part of the bargain. Fortunately, in this case the translator did a fine job, and the French text is just as enjoyable as the Italian original. Also, Piste noire/Pista Nera/Black Run/Der Gefrierpunkt des Blutes/Pista Negra/... proves that it's not the genre that turns a novel into a work of literature, but the art of writing.
Profile Image for Silvia.
245 reviews33 followers
March 7, 2020
Schiavone è insopportabile, poche luci e tante ombre. La struttura è quella del classico giallo: il morto, le indagini, la risoluzione del caso. Non un intreccio particolarmente complesso, non un finale da cardiopalma. Però le pagine scorrono veloci e la storia principale è accompagnata da tutto quel che succede lì intorno e che è almeno altrettanto importante, piccole rivelazioni sul passato di Schiavone, qualche personaggio più approfondito, eventi collaterali a quelli della trama principale.
3,5
Profile Image for piperitapitta.
1,012 reviews410 followers
February 11, 2015
L'uomo in Clarks.

È il vicequestore Rocco Schiavone, trasferito da quattro mesi ad Aosta per "punizione".
Un po' Coliandro e un po' Monnezza, romano de Trastevere, si aggira sulla scena del suo primo delitto valligiano in loden e Clarks sulla neve dei campi da sci di Champoluc.
È un fattaccio, una rottura di coglioni di decimo grado, il non plus ultra, la madre di tutte le rotture di coglioni: il caso sul groppone, come la definisce secondo la sua personale classifica di fastidi lo stesso Schiavone, cum laude, per via del delitto.
Sciupafemmine (per ora tutto fumo e poco arrosto), un po' grezzo, strafottente e dai metodi non proprio ortodossi, incline per vocazione naturale a oltrepassare il confine del consentito sia per convenienza d'indagine che per tornaconto personale, Schiavone è però dotato di intelligenza finissima, che unita alla "classificazione zoologica mentale" che utilizza per riconoscere in ogni persona che incontra l'animale al quale assomiglia, e a una capacità intuitiva sempre utile alle indagini, riesce sempre a metterlo sulla pista giusta, anche quando si tratta di una pista nera a tutti gli effetti.
Che il commissariato di Aosta, così come molti dei suoi occupanti, sia modellato sul calco di quello di Vigata non lo scopro certo io, e se questo nel complesso risulta piacevole e non indispettisce durante la lettura, diventa invece fastidioso nella descrizione del rapporto fra Schiavone e D'intino, che finisce per diventare un clone a tutti gli effetti di quello fra Montalbano e Catarella.
Lettura comunque piacevole, disimpegnata e frizzante, caratterizzata da una venatura malinconica che si oppone alla sfrontatezza esteriore del commiss... (ops!) vicequestore, capace di aggiungere un segno distintivo alla figura di Schiavone e un alone di mistero intorno alla sua storia.
Il che, come in ogni giallo che si rispetti, non guasta mai.
Profile Image for Sofia.
1,268 reviews256 followers
February 22, 2024
Non politically correct Rocco - not at our service

Manzini's Black Run introduces Rocco Schiavone, whom I found to be rather unpleasant. But then what Manzini does is start examining this character whilst he is doing the work he is so disrespectful of but so good at at the same time. So we have a lot of dark and light and different angles going on and that is enjoyable. Especially if we extend the character study to the study of the nation, Italy, as a whole.
Profile Image for Vasilis Kalandaridis.
393 reviews13 followers
May 29, 2015
Ένα υπέροχο μικρό διαμαντάκι!Το βιβλιο το πήρα σχεδόν τυχαία και σχεδόν κατά λάθος άρχισα να το διαβάζω,ευτυχώς που το έκανα!Γρηγορη,σπιντάτη θα έλεγα γραφή και ένας καταπληκτικός πρωταγωνιστής.Νευρικός,ετοιμόλογος.λατρευει τις γυναίκες,δυστυχώς ειναι φίλος της Ρομα,αλλά τι να κανουμε τώρα..Ανυπομονώ για την επόμενη ιστορία του υποδιοικητή Σκιαβόνε,έχει άλλες δυο και από ότι μου είπαν από τον Πατάκη σύντομα θα εκδοθεί άλλο ένα βιβλιο στα ελληνικά.
Profile Image for  PameFer.
291 reviews81 followers
December 6, 2020
El detective más desagradable de todos , por lejos, pero está muy bien escrita la novela y es bastante entretenida.
Profile Image for Francesca Martinello.
63 reviews4 followers
February 15, 2023
Mi ha divertito, incuriosito e stupito! Non pensavo mi sarebbe piaciuto tanto, ora son curiosa dei successivi!
Profile Image for Stan.
417 reviews7 followers
June 2, 2013
What an outstanding detective novel. It's a real page turner, not because of any excitement in the plot -- there is very little "action" per se -- but because it is beautifully crafted. There is almost no extraneous information; everything in the book is there for a reason, and adds to your understanding. The protagonist, who is the focus of virtually every page, is a rather imperfect but extremely intelligent detective. We really get to know him as this novel unfolds. It's very well written, for its genre, not chock full of clichés, though a few of the minor characters are familiar types for police novels. It's full of very fun colloquial Italian. Is there a better language for swearing than Italian? I doubt it.
All in all a really fun read, and I'll be sure to look for more novels by Antonio Manzini.
Profile Image for Geles.
179 reviews32 followers
August 19, 2020
Serie protagonizada por el subjefe Rocco Schiavone, un policía de ciudad que acaba de ser desterrado a una pequeña ciudad de los Alpes italianos, como consecuencia de algunos errores que culminaron con un turbio incidente con el hijo de un poderoso político.
La trama policíaca en sí no destaca, podríamos decir que lo que hace que sea entretenida y divertida es el personaje de Rocco, con sus peculiares métodos de investigación, y el elenco de personajes secundarios que le rodean.
Una serie para pasar un buen rato.
Profile Image for Anastasia.
491 reviews54 followers
February 19, 2017
Αναπάντεχα εξαιρετικό!
Το απόλαυσα,το διασκέδασα κι ένοιωσα ωσάν να έκανα διακοπές στις Ιταλικές Άλπεις!....ενώ προσπαθούσα να λύσω τον γρίφο....ο ήρωας του Μαντσίνι ,ο επιθεωρητής Σκιαβόνε,μοναδικά γοητευτικός....
Πού είναι το επόμενο?!
Profile Image for Idoia blanco.
478 reviews53 followers
October 30, 2021
Muy bueno, con muy buenos protagonistas, sobre todo Rocco, un personaje con muchísimo carácter, sin modales y sin pelos en la lengua. Un poco violento para ser policía, pero algo esconde en su cabeza por lo cual es así. Voy a por el siguiente...
9/10
Profile Image for Patryx.
459 reviews144 followers
September 8, 2019
O tempora, o mores!

Ho conosciuto il vicequestore Schiavone nell'omonima serie e così ho deciso di leggere anche i libri da cui era stata tratta, nonostante i commenti non sempre favorevoli dei lettori, anzi se non ci fosse stata la serie i libri non li avrei proprio letti!
Mi piace Giallini e, secondo me, riesce a interpretare bene il protagonista ma, leggendo le vicende narrate, ho provato un certo fastidio per questo poliziotto che non rispetta la legge e agisce in modo poco ortodosso.
Non sono una bacchettona (almeno credo) e sono sempre stata convinta che l'autore abbia la massima libertà, tanto è vero che questo fastidio non l'ho provato durante la visione della serie tv: esistono i poliziotti che non sono ligi alla legge e l'autore ha scelto di dare queste caratteristiche al suo personaggio, sta poi al lettore/telespettatore decidere se seguirlo o meno.
Quindi, mi sono chiesta, perché questo cambiamento? Probabilmente ho raggiunto la saturazione nei confronti del politicamente scorretto, dell'aggressività verbale, della maleducazione e, soprattutto, dell'idea che ognuno di noi è in grado di stabilire cosa è giusto e cosa non lo è trascurando le regole comuni e la legge che spesso, lo so bene, è farraginosa e rende difficile perseguire l'obiettivo di assicurare i delinquenti alla giustizia.
Insomma, non è colpa di Schiavone ma di questi nostri tempi (degli ultimi 14 mesi direi) che mi vedono più propensa verso il libro Cuore che verso le situazioni complicate in cui i confini tra bene e male non sono scolpiti nella roccia!
Profile Image for Calzean.
2,689 reviews1 follower
June 22, 2018
Deputy Police Chief Rocco Schiaovne has some shtick. His tongue wags quickly and he says what most people think but wouldn't have the gall to say. He has a dark past, is happy to do some illegal moonlighting if money is involved and loves women. There is a crime in this story but I think it is more about establishing the character and his secret (or probably one of them).
A story with style.
Profile Image for Giorgos K.
103 reviews19 followers
November 19, 2021
Η ιστορία δεν είναι και τίποτα το ιδιαίτερο αλλά ο Ρόκκο είναι απολαυστικός και γι αυτόν τα αστέρια!
Profile Image for Dvora Treisman.
Author 2 books28 followers
June 6, 2016
On the cover of my copy it says "Diamond-hard crime writing" (Financial Times). I say that the Financial Times doesn't know much more about writing than it does about the political situation in Spain (for which I give it low marks). I would describe the writing as a cheap plastic imitation of a diamond.

Our hero, Schiavone, is a womanizer, he's rude, he insults his own officers, he himself engages in criminal activities. Being vulgar doesn't make one hard-boiled, it makes one vulgar. Manzini tried all the tricks available to make Schiavone hard-boiled but as far as I'm concerned, he failed. I want my detectives to have some moral fiber, and I want to like them. I like detectives Maigret, Montalbano, Morse, Spade, and even, on the right day, Poirot (who is poached). I didn't like Schiavone.
Profile Image for Ermocolle.
425 reviews37 followers
March 16, 2021
Ho letto tutti i libri di Manzini con le storie di Rocco Schiavone e, avendo visto un po' il tenore delle recensioni, credo che andrò un po' controcorrente rispetto al sentire comune.
A me le vicende del vice questore Schiavone piacciono. Il personaggio sfrontato e anticonvenzionale, un po' imperfetto ma con una sua morale e con suo sviluppato senso della giustizia contro soprusi e delitti a me appassiona.
Non ho seguito la serie televisiva con Marco Giallini, sebbene apprezzi l'attore, proprio perché ho voluto conservare intatto il mio "disegno" personale del protagonista.
Posso tranquillamente valutare quasi tutti i romanzi con quattro stelle, tranne gli ultimi due riferiti all'indagine sul Casinò, che ho trovato un po' più deboli.
Ho in lista da leggere l'ultimo in ordine di pubblicazione e spero di trovare nuovi stimoli per proseguire la lettura.
Profile Image for Dimitris Kopsidas.
348 reviews21 followers
July 25, 2022
Ο Manzini κάνει τη διαφορά με μια γραφή άλλοτε αρκετα περιγραφική και άλλοτε απλή και με αρκετό χιούμορ και έναν πρωταγωνιστή ο οποίος συμπεριφέρεται σαν κάθαρμα, αν και έχει κάποια χαρακτηριστικά που τον εξιλεώνουν στα μάτια του αναγνώστη.
Η αστυνομική υπόθεση αρκετά basic χωρίς κάποια ιδιαιτερότητα. Αυτά που σου μένουν στο τέλος είναι τα ελκυστικά τοπία της ορεινής Ιταλίας και οι βασικοί χαρακτήρες που δεν ακολουθούν πάντα το γράμμα του νόμου για να επιτύχουν το στόχο τους.
Ουσιαστικά το βιβλίο αυτό, με έναν ευχάριστο τρόπο, στήνει τις βάσεις για τους χαρακτήρες της σειράς και προσωπικά μου κέντρισε οριακά το ενδιαφέρον για να συνεχίσω και στο επόμενο.. από το οποίο όμως θα έχω περισσότερες προσδοκίες.

<6,6/10
Profile Image for Tobias Grey.
326 reviews
October 3, 2021
Lo destacable del libro es la forma en que está escrito, que es muy dinámica, y los personajes.
Rocco Schiavone es un subjefe de policía corrupto, malhablado, con técnicas de investigación poco ortodoxas, con un trabajo que es una "tocada de pelotas"...un personaje singular, que teniendo todo para resultar detestable, consigue llegar a caer bien y que no puedas parar de reír.
Muy, muy recomendable!
Profile Image for Raffa.
230 reviews88 followers
August 2, 2024
Comincia così la mia avventura con il vicequestore Rocco Schiavone, nato dalla penna di Manzini.
Ho trovato questo giallo delizioso e ben costruito.
Mi ha stupito ed appassionato in un momento in cui cercavo solo leggerezza.

Ho amato il protagonista, che piace nonostante non sia uno stinco di santo e non usi metodi sempre ortodossi.

Mentre giravo le pagine per me il vicequestore aveva il volto del bravissimo Giallini, e mi piaceva. 😊
Profile Image for A.K. Kulshreshth.
Author 8 books73 followers
July 21, 2021
A unique voice marred by too much drama in the end.

What's most remarkable about this series, which I will read more of, is Sig. Manzini's unparalleled skill in showing the a**hole side of Deputy Police Chief Rocco Schiavone. By way of examples: .

The second most remarkable thing is that you'll probably end up warming up to the guy. There's something heartwarming about the guy from Rome banished to a remote mountain town.

There is a lot of social commentary, which is great.

Be warned: comparisons to Camileri are ridiculous. I could accept that the plotting is perhaps superior to Camileri's, since plot is not what makes the Montalbano series the magnificent creation that it is.

I heard a very well done Audible version - well done except for the rendering of a Hindu verse which was an assault on my very broad mind.

Bottom line: the first of a series that made me want to read more of the series.
436 reviews28 followers
March 11, 2016
I literally had to force myself to read the first half of this book for so many reasons. For one, a main character who comes across as a very hostile, angry, and hateful person with no conscience, and every time he opens his mouth is to insult, degrade, and cut down someone in a worse way possible such as the way he insults one of subordinates about his weight, missing teeth, the way his hair looks, etc. He looks at each female he comes across as someone he can have his way with to satisfy his physical needs, not as human being to relate on an emotional level. This is a law enforcement officer who has no respect for law to the point of keeping a stash at his drawer and smoking pot at work during business hours. It is not beneath him turning in half of the drugs he confiscates to the authorities and keeping the other half to sell it illegally to pocket the money. He bullies people to intimidate and to make them do what he wants them to do even breaking the law, such as making the postmaster delivering the murder victim’s mail to him, and resorts to violence if he doesn’t like what someone says. It seems it is the all the rage portraying troubled and emotionally immature characters in cop shows on TV today. However these characters have some redeemable, relatable and likeable character traits unlike Rocco, the main character in this book.

While the first half of the book doesn’t have much of a story line or character development, in the second part of the book, the story picks up speed, the suspense builds up, the murder mystery starts unfolding, and one starts seeing some kindness and feelings in Rocco. Overall the writing style of the book is so unique, descriptive, and pleasure the read. Obviously the author of this book is so talented. Never the less, the characters in a book need to be relatable and likeable on some level however flawed they may be in order to sell books. The first part of the book is no more than two stars and the last part is four. Since I liked the last part written exceptionally well, I may give another try to this series before I make up my mind.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 541 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.