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Camilla Trinchieri is the author of the Tuscan Mysteries series, launched in 2020 with Murder in Chianti. This series features the former NYPD detective Nico Doyle, who has left detective work behind, moving to the Italian hometown, Gravigna, of his deceased wife, Rita, and hoping to find some peace. The village is in the Chianti region, and Nico, half-Italian and half-Irish, slowly builds a new life working with Rita’s relatives. But soon he is also pulled back into the world of policing, recruited by the local Maresciallo, or marshal, Salvatore Perillo, to aid in a murder investigation in quiet and peaceful Gravigna.

Camilla Trinchieri

As the series progresses, Nico aids in several further investigations with both Perillo and Brigadier Daniele Donato, and also continues to build his new life and home with his dog, OneWag. Over the course of time, Nico becomes a beloved member of the community, and even finds a new special person in his life in this village in Chianti.

The series, now four-books strong, has won praise from reviewers from its launch onward. A Publishers Weekly critic called Murder in Chianti a “vibrant mystery” with “enticing descriptions of food and wine,” while Kirkus dubbed that series launch an “engaging procedural that introduces a delightful cast of characters readers will want to spend more time with.”

The series now stands at four novels, with The Bitter Taste of Murder published in 2021, Murder on the Vine from 2022; and The Road to Murder from 2024. Along the way, the series has continued to gain new readers and excellent reviews, often compared to the Venetian procedurals of Donna Leon and the Chief Inspector Gamache works of Louise Penny.

The author, Trinchieri, has herself lived a life worthy of a novel. She was born in Prague to an Italian diplomat father and American mother, moved to the U.S. with her parents when she was twelve, and then after graduating from Banard College, moved to Italy. There she lived in Rome and worked in the film industry as a dubbing producer and director on films from Federico Fellini, Luchino Visconti, Lina Wertmüller and many others. Then back to the United States where she married, became a U.S.citizen, and earned an MFA from Columbia University’s renowned Graduate Writing Program.

Trinchieri has published numerous other novels both under her own name and writing as Camilla Crespi, including seven novels in the Simona Griffo Mystery Series.

Camilla, welcome to Scene of the Crime. I’ve been looking forward to talking with you about your excellent Tuscan Mysteries series. Let’s start things off with your connection to Italy and Chianti.

My first connection is being Italian. I discovered my Chianti town one summer while town-hopping though Tuscany. Something about the place drew me in a way I hadn’t experienced in other towns. I knew I wanted to place a story in this town without really knowing why. It didn’t matter. I have always let my gut feelings lead me. Having only lived in cities, I knew nothing about town life so the year I went back I stayed for a month. I have gone back every year, staying for two or three weeks each time.

What things about Gravigna make it unique and a good physical setting in your books?

It’s a simple town, beautifully situated above a valley covered with vineyards and surrounded by verdant hills beloved by cyclists. It is a feast for the eyes, but so are many more beautiful towns. It is unique to me because I discovered warm, welcoming people, many of whom have become friends. The town has become my home away from home.

Did you consciously set out to use your location as a “character” in your books, or did this grow naturally out of the initial story or stories?

I think it would be hard to write about any place in Italy without it being a character. Gravigna was my first character, then my stories spread out to neighboring towns and the surrounding landscapes. As I write, I go where Nico and OneWag, the Maresciallo and Daniele go. I walk the streets with them, follow them, listen to them with my eyes taking in where they are, what they see.

How do you incorporate location in your fiction? Do you pay overt attention to it in certain scenes, or is it a background inspiration for you?

I developed a strong sense of place as a child. My father was an Italian diplomat. Growing up I changed countries, schools, languages. I learned to study my new surroundings, to assess where I was in order to place myself there quickly. I try to place my characters so that the reader is in the same place with them, seeing and hearing, and I hope, feeling what they are feeling. I don’t think of myself as being conscious of referring to my town in an overt way. I am just there with my characters, watching and listening to them.

How does Nico interact with his surroundings and vice versa?

Nico first interacts with his deceased wife’s cousin, who runs Sotto Il Fico, a local restaurant. The restaurant setting recurs throughout the stories as Nico enthusiastically starts cooking. I suspect he would have been happy to stay in that kitchen, and after work grow vegetables in his garden, enjoy the small farmhouse he has rented, and have breakfast with Gogol, his Dante quoting friend at Bar Al Angolo, another setting where Nico is welcomed and made to feel at home. I think that by moving to Gravigna, Nico expected a quiet life far from the murders he had to deal with back in New York. It’s a dog’s cry that gets him further into the life of the town. He finds a body. At first reluctant to help Maresciallo Perillo solve the murder, Nico accepts the job. By doing so he becomes one of the town, part of the setting. The setting helps him stop grieving, gives him a new life.

Has there been any local reaction to your works? What do the residents of Gravigna think about these books?

Local reaction has been wonderful, despite the books not being read as only a few townspeople read English. I think they get a kick about being featured in American books. A weekly Chianti newspaper wrote a nice article about the mysteries. The Italian publisher who had brought out three other books of mine thought the Chianti mysteries were too oriented toward foreigners and so declined to have them translated. I agree with her, although I would love to have my Chianti friends read them.

Have you ever made any goofs in depicting your location or time period? Please share–the more humorous the better (we all have).

I am sure I have made many goofs, mostly in the area of Italian criminal law despite the help I received from the Greve-in-Chianti maresciallo. Since the mysteries have not been translated, my goofs have not been spotted.

Of the novels you have written set in this location, do you have a favorite book or scene that focuses on the place? Could you quote a short passage or give an example of how the location figures in your novels?

From Murder in Chianti:

The air was still chilly at that hour, a fact Nico welcomed as he set off for his three-mile run along the winding road that led up to Gravigna. It was steep going and dangerous in the predawn light. Even at that hour cars kept whizzing past in both directions on their way to work.

When the town appeared, perched on its own small hill, Nico stopped to catch his breath and take in the view of the old town of Gravigna, with its medieval castle walls, its two towers, the proud steeple of the Sant’Agnese Church. In the meager predawn light Nico could, with the help of memory, make out the hundreds of neat rows of vines that covered the Conca d’Oro, the golden bowl below the town that had once only grown grain….

Who are your favorite writers, and do you feel that other writers influenced you in your use of the spirit of place in your novels?

My love for mysteries started with Agatha Christie and Rex Stout. Through the years Tana French, Aaron Elkins, Laura Lippman, Ann Cleeves and many, many others. I am sure they all have influenced me in one way or another. For one thing, they make me want to write well.

If you could live anywhere, where would it be and why?

La bella Italia. In Panzano, with occasional trips to Rome, my old home and where I have family. I left Italy for New York many years ago, but it is still very much in my heart.

What’s next for Nico?

A murder in the medieval town of Pitigliano, also known as Little Jerusalem. Nico is hired by a woman who wants her partner, the father of her child, cleared of the murder of his business partner.

Camilla, many thanks for joining us at Scene of the Crime. It’s been a pleasure. Looking forward to further installments of this fine series.

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Starting Today 3/10/24

Hello folks! I want to let you know that I am on the Goodreads Book Giveaway for ten signed first editions of my new historical mystery, The Cry of Cicadas. This is the series launch of BYRNS ON THE HOMEFRONT, inspired by that wonderful Brit series, Foyle’s War. For those of you who enjoyed my VIENNESE MYSTERIES, I am sure you will bond with this one, as well. A similar eye to historical detail, compelling characters, nuanced suspense and mystery, and gripping setting–WWII on the American homefront with all its resilience and, of course, crimes.

I am also offering the ebook edition of The Cry of Ciadas on Amazon for a reduced price and for a limited time on Amazon’s Countdown Deal. I want to reach as many former and new readers as possible, as I believe this is a series you will take to heart, as so many of you did with the VIENNESE MYSTERIES.

But unlike that series, I will be the one who determines when BYRNS ON THE HOMEFRONT ends. My Viennese series ended when my publishers were purchased by a larger house. So, I determined that I would be the publisher for this series. It is all on me.

Good luck with the giveaway–be sure to click on the Goodreads Book Giveawy above–contest lasts until March 30. Available only to Goodreads members in the U.S.

I look forward to signing and sending those ten copies.

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Print vs. Digital

I come from a farming family, though I am very far removed from the land now. I make my living with my imagination, not my hands. But there is still a strong connection to those roots: like a farmer, I consume what I produce. Not many jobs like that.

I write books, and I read books written by others. Continuously. That’s what writers do. Farmers produce food and consume food, mostly produced by others.

But like many other readers, my consumption pattern has changed over the years. Our home library has a couple thousand books double-rowed in floor-to ceiling shelves. On many of those shelves, more books have found residence horizontally on top of the upright books. No Dewey decimal system, but I have a vague sense of where books belong: foreign-language titles, far left; then British and American fiction spanning the mid sections; nonfiction in the final rows to the right. And another smaller bookcase on the opposite wall is filled with paperback mysteries and thrillers.

I also carry in my left front pocket a library of equal breadth in my digital library. And now we finally get to the nut graph:

I read more from that electronic library than I do from the physical one. Oh, I will pick up the odd Steinbeck or Dickens or Robertson Davies for a re-read, but for new titles and convenience I must admit the e-reader gets a lot of use.

In part this has to do with my peripatetic life-style as a younger man, traveling in countries where English-language books could be scarce and/or expensive. Much time and energy was spent tracking down other likely looking travelers for a book swap. So having a library of books in my pocket is a security blanket.

But it is more than that. There is the ease of it, especially reading in bed, standing on a crowded subway train, waiting for a delayed dentist appointment. The smart phone accompanies us on our daily activities—you always have your books with you. And I am an avid library user: digital libraries make my selections available wherever I have wifi, worldwide.

Yet, there is that niggle of guilt of leaving print books mostly behind. A mini betrayal. I mean, when one of my books is published, it is of course the hardback or softcover copy I hold lovingly, new baby-like in my hands with a feeling of pride.

And there is a rich and lengthy tradition for physical books. Book production of some sort has been around since the 1st century B.C.; printed books started in China in 868 A.D. with hand-carved wood blocks cut in reverse for the printing of The Diamond Sutra. And let us not forget Herr Gutenberg and his bible from mid-15th century.

While our e-book stepchild has only been around since 1971.

Let me know in the comments section about your own battle of print vs digital. Where do you stand? Is it a divide for you or a happy combination? And let me also know if I can publish your comments in a further post (with your name or anonymously).

I look forward to hearing from you all. And keep on reading!

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Tess Gerritsen’s The Spy Coast

I have a confession to make. I have never read any of the thirteen novels in Tess Gerritsen’s ‘Rizzoli &Isles’ mystery series. Nor any of the other thirty-plus books this amazingly prolific medical doctor-turned author has penned.

Shame on me.

But the latest, The Spy Coast, about a collection of retired spooks all living in a small town in Maine, caught my attention. And so happy it did.

This novel is not just a nostalgic look at the glory days of superannuated CIA operatives. Nope. Maggie Bird, one of the members of this crew, the Martini Club as they style themselves, discovers that her past is not behind her. A body is found in Maggie’s driveway, and now she knows her former enemies have not forgotten her or the final op that ended her career.

Self-preservation kicks in and Maggie—with a little help from her friends in the Martini Club and the local acting police chief—sets off on a mission around the globe in order to save the quiet life in Maine she’s built for herself.

There is a bit of a tip of the hat to Red, the 2010 movie, but The Spy Coast is its own animal, and The second in ‘The Martini Club’ series, The Summer Guests, is coming in March.

Highly recommended.

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In Search of a Title

My new novel, The Cry of Cicadas, is now available at Amazon, both ebook and paperack.

This novel took a long time, both in writing and publishing. A work of love. And tenacity. But probably the hardest part about this novel was figuring out the title.

My first take was A Matter of Loyalty. That lasted a few rounds with the editors. Then there were a couple of sensational ones suggested by an agent: Lured Toward the Edge. That lasted one round of submissions. And then Murder at the Bluff. Another round of submissions.

Basically I was looking for something that would call to mind the period nature of the novel, set in WWII on the American homefront. Sort of an American Foyle’s War. Loved that seres. I’ll read anything that Tony Horowitz writes. So I came up with Byrns on the Homefront.

Problem was, I began to look at the novel as the first in a series and not a standalone. And Byrns on the Homefront was definitely a series title.

Then came Basho charging onto the scene. The wonderful seventeenth-century poet of Edo period Japan. His poem, “The Cry of Cicadas,” still leaps off the page hundreds of years later, variously translated: “Nothing in the cry of cicadas suggests they are about to die.”

And it is not a spoiler to mention that a namesake for that poet was already a lingering mystery in the novel.

Voila!

Such is the sausage-making that goes into creating a title.

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