• 0 items$0.00

Alan Squire Publishing

A Small Press With Big Ideas

  • Home
  • Authors
  • Books
  • Events
  • ASP Bulletin
  • Reviews/Press
    • Legacy Series
  • Submissions
  • Staff
  • FB
  • Twitter
  • IG
Home / home / David Downie Discusses “Red Riviera” with Don George

Jul 16 2021

David Downie Discusses “Red Riviera” with Don George

A discussion about Italy, globetrotting, and crime from two of travel writing's greatest minds.

Order Red Riviera Now

Its jaws open wide, a firefighting seaplane skims the glittering Gulf of Portofino on Italy’s jagged Ligurian coast, scooping up seawater, unlucky anchovies and a lone swimmer named Joe Gary. The superrich, retired Italian-American spook has mob connections and a dirty political past. Has he been snatched by accident or murdered?

Red Riviera is Commissioner Daria Vinci’s first investigation, a wild roller-coaster ride from the tangled trails of the Cinque Terre to glamorous Portofino and roughneck, roistering Genoa. It’s a Riviera made red by riotous bougainvillea—and the blood spilling from bags stuffed with butchered bodies.

Half-American, Daria Vinci is an outsider, the unlikely rising star of Genoa’s secretive Special Operations Directorate DIGOS. In Red Riviera, she must face down a Fascist police chief and fanatical coup-plotter, the CIA’s creepy local mastermind, a former World War Two Spitfire fighter pilot, and a plucky hundred-year-old marquise whose memory is as long as it is vengeful. If you like Aurelio Zen, Aimee Leduc, and Inspector Brunetti, you won’t be able to put down this captivating first adventure of Commissioner Daria Vinci.

Katherine E. Young Breaks Down Her New Translation of LOOK AT HIM by Anna Starobinets

September 22, 2020

Katherine E. Young appears on Leslie Pietrzyk “To be Read” blog series to discuss her new translation of a book that “ignited a firestorm” in Russia

Challenge and Ambition: Rose Solari Releases new Poetry Reviews for WIRoB

September 17, 2020

Rose Solari’s reviews this month focus on four collections that “challenge and stretch the reader’s expectations in terms of content, form, or both.”

Rose Solari Joins in a Dickinson Tradition at this Year’s Tell it Slant Festival

September 16, 2020

While the Emily Dickinson poetry marathon is not a marathon in the traditional sense, it does test the endurance, fortitude, and preparedness of all its participants. Over a seven day period, 14 hours in all, participants will read every one of the enigmatic 19th-century poet’s 1,789 poems in the order prescribed by R.W. Franklin’s The Poems of Emily Dickinson.

  • « Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • …
  • 122
  • Next »

Written by Alan Squire Publishing · Categorized: home

© Copyright 2026 Alan Squire Publishing. All Rights Reserved. Website by Sara Chandlee. Graphic design by Dewitt Designs