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This is the story of the criminal epic of the "Mala del Brenta", the criminal organization led by Felice Maniero, The Godfather with angel face and devil heart who for twenty years bloodied Venezia and Veneto Region. They were "the Versace boys sprayed by Van Cleef". They were country boys who didn't want a job and a normal life. They wanted everything and they wanted it right away. They preferred the gun to the shovel, the Ferrari to the pick up. They were country boys and Felice Maniero was their guide. Angel Face pushed them beyond all limits and perhaps even further. He has opened the door for them to worlds and riches that they could not even have imagined. He took them up to heaven and then, one day, he abandoned them to plunge them straight into hell with a one-way ticket ...
On May 4th, 1998, occurred one of the most bloody crimes ever committed in the Vatican city: the body of the new commander of the Swiss Guard Alois Estermann, his wife Gladys Meza Romero and the vice Corporal Cedric Tornay were found dead in a pool of blood. There is an official reconstruction and an official truth for this terrible crime, but many people are still wondering how things really went. Pezzan and Brunoro retrace step by step this story to try to understand if there may be an alternative truth to the one established by the courts of the Holy See, in order to untangle one of the most murky and tangled cases in the recent history of the Vatican.
The kidnapping of Aldo Moro lasted 55 days, from March 16, 1978, the day of the ambush in Fani street, to the following May 9, when the body of the president of the Christian Democratic Party was found in Caetani street. But if the most famous kidnapping in the history of Italy ended tragically in less than two months, the political-judicial case that followed has been going on for decades. The Aldo Moro affaire, in fact, represents the darkest point in Italian republican history. This is a story in which everyone got their hands dirty: terrorists, politicians, journalists, law enforcement, secret services, the Vatican, governments, international spies, military from different countries. Tel...
The Vatican history is a thousand-year-old history of lights and shadows, of great personalities and gloomy individuals. The story of the election and strange death of Pope Luciani is fully part of the long series of episodes that are still shrouded in mystery: a sudden death with no investigation. And then a whole series of stranger things, starting with the 33-day duration of the pontificate of Pope John Paul I, to arrive at the third secret of Fatima of which it seems that Albino Luciani was aware. But in this story intersect also the great scandals of Vatican finance which in the 70s and 80s profoundly undermined the credibility of the Church with the case of the Banco Ambrosiano and that of the Vatican Bank. And again high Vatican prelates enrolled in Freemasonry and the figure of Licio Gelli plotting in the shadows: what happened in Rome in that September 1978?
When the name of an author enters not only in the history of literature but even becomes synonymous with a common word, then it is clear that we are talking about a character of truly exceptional importance. The merit (or demerit) of De Sade was that of having highlighted the darkest and most unacknowledged part of the human soul. The Marquis de Sade was the author of novels characterized by a cruel and shocking eroticism for his time, it is no coincidence that the term "sadism" was initially used in psychiatry and only later became commonplace. The story of the Marquis de Sade, however, is not simply the story of a monstrous and obscene literary construction, but it is also the story of a man who lived an extraordinary life, then personally paying a very high price for his choices and for his unbridled passions. With his usual dry and essential style Esther Neumann tells the incredible human parable of de Sade highlighting the profound originality of the thought of the boudoir philosopher, a man who had the courage and boldness to go beyond every limit and every moral law.
Ho Chi Minh was one of the central characters of the twentieth century. Everyone remembers him for leading North Vietnam together with General Giap in the incredible military victory against the United States, but his story began long before that dirty war. Ho Chi Minh, unlike many revolutionary leaders of the time such as Mao himself, wrote and spoke various foreign languages such as French, English, Russian, German and Chinese. He had been a worker, a sailor, a pastry chef assistant to the internationally renowned cook Escoffier in the luxurious London hotel Carlton, the Buddhist monk in Siam. He had traveled through China disguising himself as a blind peasant, then finding work in Manchuria invaded by Japan as a French journalist. But, above all, he had been the man capable of breaking French colonial chains over Indochina by forever changing the face of South East Asia. The life of Ho Chi Minh is the fascinating tale of the man who was able to create modern Vietnam without stopping in front of anyone, a skilled and ruthless politician who left an indelible mark on history.
In the nonfiction tradition of John Berendt and Erik Larson, the author of the #1 NYT bestseller The Lost City of the Monkey God presents a gripping account of crime and punishment in the lush hills surrounding Florence as he seeks to uncover one of the most infamous figures in Italian history. In 2000, Douglas Preston fulfilled a dream to move his family to Italy. Then he discovered that the olive grove in front of their 14th century farmhouse had been the scene of the most infamous double-murders in Italian history, committed by a serial killer known as the Monster of Florence. Preston, intrigued, meets Italian investigative journalist Mario Spezi to learn more. This is the true story of t...
"A must read guaranteed to give newbies a clear and complete understanding of the Monster's murders and of the various investigative theories. The book could also be a great reference for “experts” who believe they know everything on the subject, as it uncovers valuable clues and revelations about the murders and the investigations” (Gabriele Basilica, Thriller Magazine). “Those passionate about true crime stories will certainly appreciate the analysis of the murders of the Monster of Florence. Brunoro and Pezzan write about everything, from Vincenzo Spalletti to the Sardinian Lead, from Pietro Pacciani to the picnicking friends, and finally from the esoteric theory to the Narducci s...
Quando ripensiamo ai fatti significativi della nostra vita tutti noi ormai siamo abituati a ragionare in termini di “prima” o “dopo” l'11 settembre 2001. È un dato di fatto oggettivo: quel giorno ha diviso la storia del mondo in un “prima” ed in un “dopo”. Ormai quando si usa l'espressione “undici settembre” non serve più nemmeno specificare di che anno si tratti: è chiaro per tutti che ci si riferisce all'11 settembre 2001. A vent'anni da quei tragici attentati un collettivo internazionale di autori ha ricostruito nei dettagli quella giornata drammatica, analizzando i lati oscuri che hanno preceduto e seguito quella vicenda e, soprattutto, confrontandosi con le più n...
Il Feldmaresciallo Erwin Rommel è stato molto probabilmente l'unico comandante tedesco ammirato e stimato anche dai suoi nemici durante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale. Il suo coraggio, il suo senso dell'onore, le sue strategie rivoluzionarie e geniali lo trasformarono ben presto in un mito, tanto che resta storica la circolare distribuita agli ufficiali inglesi nel '41 in cui era scritto: "Vi prego di usare tutti i mezzi possibili per dissipare l'idea che Rommel rappresenti qualcosa di più che un comune generale tedesco". Silverstone racconta la vita di Rommel con il suo stile essenziale e pulito, lasciando che siano i fatti a parlare e presentando un ritratto avvincente di uno dei grandi protagonisti dell'ultimo conflitto mondiale.