Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Review: The German Client by Bruno Morchio


Genre: History/Mystery

Description:

There are three strands to this book: secret events of 1944 during the Nazi occupation of Italy (after the fall of Mussolini); a search for those secrets in ‘the present day’ (this book was first published, in Italian, in 2008); this second thread being displacement activity for Bacci Pagano, while he sits by the hospital bedside of his comatose girlfriend, Jasmine, who has been badly beaten waiting for her to wake or not wake – which is the third thread.

The events of 1944 are loosely based in fact, and the setting (Sestri and surrounding area near Genoa) is accurate.

One of the puffs at the front of the book, from Il Giornale di Brescia, claims this is “the best novel Morchio has written so far.” Telegraph Avenue adds that “This is the beauty and the distinctive trait of Italian noir. There is more than just crime: [there are also] history, politics, society, love, friendship.”

Bacci Pagano is the protagonist in a series of gumshoe-type investigations by Morchio. Italian readers are very fond of him. This is the fifteenth in the Pagano series and the first to be translated into English (in 2020) by Kazabo Publishing, which specialises in providing English translations of books which have been bestsellers in their original language but have never been available in English before. Perhaps unusually for series, especially this far in, Il Giornale’s review claims this series is hitting a new high note with this book.

Author:

Bruno Morchio lives in Genoa, Italy, where he worked as a psychologist. He has won two literary prizes for the mystery genre, the “Azzeccagarbugli” and the “Lomellina in Giallo” Prizes; and has been a finalist for the “Bancarella”, “Scerbanenco” and “Romiti” Prizes.

Appraisal:

Morchio is very knowledgeable about the area in which this book is set. It is a reasonable supposition that the local 1944 story piqued his interest, and led him to write this particular book. The Pagano books are not usually set in the past. The original 2008 publication date was already nudging the edges of plausibility for a WWII story, if your protagonist is going to be interviewing participants in that conflict in your book’s present. Even teenage partisans would have been about eighty in 2008, and the eponymous German, in his sixties, is the son of Hauptmann Hessen, the German in the story from 1944. Nevertheless, that strand of the story convinces. The tendency, forged in war-time, only to speak when absolutely necessary, not to inform on a comrade, and to maintain that tight-knit comradeship to the grave comes across strongly. In point of fact, all the characters are well drawn. In addition, Italian life sits lively on the page, the Italian way of life is there on the page, and the cultural life of this time and place shine through.

Unfortunately, the three plots do not entirely hang together. Why and how Pagano became enamoured of Jasmine is never fully explained. And how she ended up in the hands of the traffickers is kept from the reader until very late in the book, providing a mystery that I found more frustrating than intriguing. The mystery from 1944 turns out to be no mystery at all, except … no, I won’t give that away – it would be a mean spoiler.

The 1944 sections set in are the strongest part of the book: I always felt we were on firmer ground when Morchio took us back to that part of the story. And it does form the major part of the book, with a satisfying plot of its own.

I hope Kazabo feel it worthwhile to translate others in the Pagano series. And that somebody decides to turn them into a television series (in Italian or English, I don’t mind) now that we have run out of the Sicilian Montalbano novels to dramatise. Here we have just enjoyed the first series of Inspector Gerri, set in Puglia (at the other end of Italy from Genoa). But Telegraph Avenue is quite correct: there is a particular charm to Italian noir, on the page or on TV.

If you are a fan of Andrea Camilleri’s Inspector Montalbano books, or you tried Pentimento Mori by Valeria Corciolani on the strength of my recent review, or you enjoy holidays in Italy or have felt you would really like to visit that country, or simply enjoy noir crime fiction, you will find much to enjoy in this novel.

Buy now from:            Amazon US        Amazon UK

Format/Typo Issues:

No significant issues.

Rating: **** Four Stars

Reviewed by: Judi Moore

Approximate word count: 65-70,000 words

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