A man who runs on Strada Maggiore to Bologna
is the cover of the last book of John Grisham The Broker, thriller
that to the tension of the protagonists he adds not only to
the taste for our language and the hard work in order to learn
it, but thin pleasures of a refined and motivated kitchen that
he hands on himself like an authentic cultural responsibility
My background is law,
certainly not satellites or espionage.
I'm more terrified of high-tech electronic gadgets today than
a year ago. (These books are still written on a thirteen-year-old
word processor.
When it stutters, as it seems to do more and more, I literally
hold my breath. When it finally quits, I'm probably done, too.)
It's all fiction, folks.
I know very little about spies, electronic surveillance, satellite
phones, smartphones, bugs, wires, mikes, and the people who use
them.
If something in this novel approaches accuracy, it's probably
a mistake.
Bologna, however, is very real.
I had the great luxury of tossing a dart at a map of the world
to find a place to hide Mr. Backman.
Almost anywhere would work.
But I adore Italy and all things Italian, and I have to confess
that I was not blindfolded when I threw the dart.
My research (too severe a word) led me to Bologna, a delightful
old city that I immediately came to adore.
My friend Luca Patuelli showed me around. He knows all the chefs
in Bologna, no small feat, and in the course of our tedious work
I put on about ten
John Grisham
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