
Auntie Poldi and the Handsome Antonio
Author: Mario Giordano, John Brownjohn
Series: Auntie Poldi #3
Narrator: Matt Addis
Unabridged: 9 hr 41 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Recorded Books
Published: 08/04/2020

Author: Mario Giordano, John Brownjohn
Series: Auntie Poldi #3
Narrator: Matt Addis
Unabridged: 9 hr 41 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Recorded Books
Published: 08/04/2020
Mario Giordano, the son of Italian immigrants, was born in Munich in 1963 and studied psychology at the University of Düsseldorf. He writes novels, books for adolescents, and screenplays. He lives in Cologne. Auntie Poldi and the Handsome Antonio is his third novel to be translated into English.
Namaste, life. Rest of the world can kiss my arse! Tante Poldi turpina sajūsmināt. Sapratu, ka šī sērija jālasa ar pārtraukumiem. Trešā grāmata atkal aizgāja uz urrā. Ideāla atvaļinājuma grāmata. Noziegums, trakie sicīlieši, dzīvespriecīgā Poldi. Gaidu turpinājumu!......more
I’ve been waiting a while to review this one because I do not know how to review Auntie Poldi without sounding like a love-sick puppy. A sixty-four-year-old ( or around there) widow with a crazy beehive wig (I googled that for an image), Auntie Poldi is a hero whom I can believe in. She’s still sexy......more
If you haven't discovered Auntie Poldi yet, then now is the time. Set in Sicily, these mysteries explore southern Italy through all the confidence and sexual bravado of Poldi, a sixty-something Bavarian with a penchant for police officers in uniform. In this installment, Poldi takes a road trip - in......more
Wonderfully fanciful I love Poldi. She complicated and manages to be both deep and flighty at the same time. She is larger than life and no one quite believes her stories but maybe they should. She's got more good advice about how to live life than a self help book and a thousand times more enjoyable......more
1.5 really The story might have been interesting and fun, if only it weren’t for the writing. Instead, if it was too ridiculous to believe and too pretentious to enjoy. 1. It’s told in a weird mix of first and third person made worse by the fact that Auntie Poldi’s nephew writes too much and in too......more