The Ides of April explained

Italic Title:(see above) -->
The Ides of April
Author:Lindsey Davis
Country:UK
Series:Flavia Albia (Falco: The New Generation)
Genre:historical mystery, crime novel
Publisher:Hodder & Stoughton
Pub Date:11 April 2013
Pages:356
Isbn:978-1-4447-5581-7
Followed By:Enemies at Home

The Ides of April is a 2013 historical mystery crime novel by Lindsey Davis and the first book in the Flavia Albia Mysteries (Falco: The New Generation).[1] [2] Set in March and April AD 89, in the Aventine Hill area of Ancient Rome, the novel stars Flavia Albia, the British-born adopted daughter of Marcus Didius Falco (the hero of the author's 20-volume Marcus Didius Falco Mysteries series, published from 1989 to 2010).[3] Albia, a widow, works as a "delatrix" (detective or private informer) in ancient Rome, like Falco. The book's front cover image depicts a small glass pot and a needle dipped in blood. It carries the strapline, "Falco: The New Generation".

Connections to the Falco series

Falco and his partner Helena are included in the "Cast list" in the book, and Flavia Albia describes them and their household and visits them during the course of the story, but they do not appear directly in the text. Helena's two brothers are mentioned as being lawyers. Falco's old friend Petro is not mentioned in the cast list, but is referred to as Flavia Albia's "uncle" in the text.

Falco's young brother Postumus, the result of Thalia's pregnancy in Nemesis, is now an awkward 11-year-old, who appears in the book.

Flavia Albia uses Falco's old apartment in Fountain Court as her office, and lives elsewhere in the same building. In Enemies at Home, it is revealed that the Didii bought over the Fountain Court block, possibly from Smaractus, Falco's former landlord.

Reception

The Irish Times reviewer wrote: "Irreverent, resourceful and hard-boiled in her patter, Flavia is a heroine to rival her contemporary counterparts VI Warshawski and Kinsey Milhone."[4] Tom Holland reviewed the book for The Guardian[5] and ended:

Debra Craine, writing in The Times, included The Ides of April in her list of ten "best crime novels by women since 2000".[6]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Ides of April (Flavia Albia Mysteries) (Flavia Albia Mystery). Davis, Lindsey. AudioGO. Unabridged . June 11, 2013. English. 978-1482100792.
  2. Book: Davis, Lindsey. The Ides of April. 2013. Hodder Paperback . 9781444755848 . Paperback.
  3. Book: Davies, Lindsey. The Ides of April. 2013. Hodder & Stoughton. 978-1444755817. 1.
  4. News: Life and death on the mean streets of ancient Rome. Burke. Declan. 13 April 2013. The Irish Times. 13 April 2013.
  5. News: The Ides of April by Lindsey Davis – review. Holland. Tom. 9 May 2013. The Guardian. 15 May 2013. Tom Holland (author).
  6. News: Craine . Debra . The best crime novels by women since 2000 . 9 October 2020 . The Times . 28 April 2020 . en.