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Showing posts with label Roma series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roma series. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Five Before Rome: 5 preludes to the Roma Series by Gabriel Valjan (Review and Giveaway!)


Five Before Rome is a prequel that gives the new reader an idea of Valjan's excellent writing. If you haven't read any of his works, this is a fine place to start. 

Book Details:

Book Title: Five Before Rome: 5 preludes to the Roma Series by Gabriel Valjan
Category: Adult fiction, 215 pages
Genre: International Crime Thriller
Publisher: Wild Goose Publishing
Release date: June 2020
Tour dates: July 7 to July 27, 2020
Content Rating: PG-13 + M. There is violence (not graphic) and mention of child abuse by the clergy. There are 4 instances of the f-word.

Book Description:

These five novellas precede Roma, Underground, the first novel in the Roma Series. Meet the five men, who form the team around Bianca, and learn about their personal history, their respective parts of Italy, and why they each have a stake in the fight against organized crime.

My Review:
Reviewed by Laura Fabiani

Five years ago, when I first read the beginning chapters of Roma, Underground I knew I would love the book. I went on to read the rest of the four books in the series. Gabriel Valjan understands the Italian culture, history, and geography and it was such a pleasure to read how he portrayed them in his novels.

The five stories in Five Before Rome, each revolving around the five men that are part of this series, brought back to mind the characters and the stories that I liked so much. It made me want to reread the books. I enjoyed all five stories, but Gennaro's story Dance of the Spider was my favorite, showing us a vulnerable side to him. Silvio's story The Fallen One was the one that touched me the most, however, and ultimately, it was a sad one. And the last story Five Before Rome was excellent, reminding me of the series as these men worked together with camaraderie to solve a crime.

Valjan includes extensive notes at the end of the book that explains Italian expressions and words, tidbits on past events, historical figures and geographical locations, all of which serve to enhance the reading experience (and make me realize how knowledgeable this author is!)

Five Before Rome is a prequel that gives the new reader an idea of Valjan's excellent writing. For those who have read one or all books in the Roma series, this will make you want to read more of Valjan's work. Highly recommended for fans of Italian mafia stories, international crime fiction and thrillers.


Buy the Book:


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About the Author:


Gabriel Valjan lives in Boston’s South End where he enjoys the local restaurants. When he isn’t appeasing Munchkin, his cat, with tuna, he documents the #dogsofsouthendboston on Instagram. His short stories have appeared online, in journals, and in several anthologies. Gabriel is the author of two series, Roma and Company Files, with Winter Goose Publishing. He was nominated for the Agatha Award for Best Historical Mystery for Company Files 2: The Naming Game in 2020.

Gabriel has been a finalist for the Fish Prize, shortlisted for the Bridport Prize, and received an Honorable Mention for the Nero Wolfe Black Orchid Novella Contest in 2018. Dirty Old Town, the first in the Shane Cleary series, was published in 2020 by Level Best Books. Gabriel attends crime fiction conferences, such as Bouchercon, Malice Domestic, and New England Crime Bake. He is a lifetime member of Sisters in Crime.


Connect with the author: 




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Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Corporate Citizen: Roma Series Book Five by Gabriel Valjan (Review & Giveaway!)



This is the next installment in the Roma Series that fans won't want to miss!

Book Details:

Corporate Citizen: Roma Series Book Five by Gabriel Valjan
ISBN: 9781941058503
Published:  October 5, 2016
Published by: Winter Goose Publishing
Trade paperback: 388 pages
Content rating: PG-13

Book Description:

A call for help from an old friend lands Bianca and the crew back in Boston. On a timeout with Dante, due to revelations in the aftermath of the showdown in Naples, Bianca is drawn to a mysterious new ally who understands the traumas of her past, and has some very real trauma of his own. Murder, designer drugs, and a hacker named Magician challenge our team, and Bianca learns that leaving Rendition behind might be much harder than she thinks.

Buy Corporate Citizen:  Amazon  ~  Barnes & Noble


My Review:
Reviewed by Sandra Olshaski

This is an intense, face-paced novel of intrigue, murder, espionage, covert US agencies, corrupt officials, amusing avatars, and strong characters, good and bad. There is a lighter side to the story in the form of "the floor people" a tuxedo cat named Bogie and a ginger tabby, Bacall, who appear throughout. A bit of comic relief, perhaps?

It's obvious that the author loves all things Italian as seen in his descriptions of food, expressions, and people. He also has a fairly in-depth knowledge of computer hacking and surveillance because he writes convincingly about it. Mr. Valjan is an expert at building suspense and uncertainty – who can you trust and who are the good guys?

I didn’t read the previous four books in this series and I must admit that it was challenging to follow the intricate, involved plot and keep the characters straight. The character list helped.

I liked the descriptions the author used. Regarding a corrupt District Attorney, the author writes, "….every time this guy shows up, people drop faster than roaches at the sight of a can of Raid….."  Regarding the Cloud, the author describes it as "the fog that is the Internet. The ether above us where bits and bytes float around for anyone with a butterfly net to steal the data in them."

Corporate Citizen is a very interesting tale that could have been told just as convincingly without the use of religious expletives and f-bombs.

To read more reviews, please visit Gabriel Valjan's page on Italy Book Tours.

You can also read Laura Fabiani's review of Corporate Citizen on Essentially Italian, and her interview with the author.

Sandra Olshaski's disclaimer: Thanks to Gabriel Valjan for sending me this book for review. I was not compensated in any other way, nor told how to rate or review this product.



About the author:


Gabriel Valjan lives in Boston, Massachusetts. He is the author of the Roma Series, available from Winter Goose Publishing. Gabriel has also written numerous short stories and essays found online and in print.

Connect with the author: Website ~ Twitter ~ Facebook


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Monday, October 3, 2016

Spotlight on one of my favorite series: The Roma series by Gabriel Valjan (Interview & Giveaway!)

Last year I discovered the Roma series. Of course, if you've been reading my blog you know that I love books set in Italy. This series got me hooked from the very first book Roma Undergound, set in the city of my mother and her family. Gabriel Valjan gets the Italian culture. What's more, the series has a strong female protagonist, a colorful cast, and a compelling and suspenseful plot. Perfect combination for me!


After reading the 4th book, I was thrilled to find out Corporate Citizen Book #5 was going to be released Oct 5, 2016!


I've read Corporate Citizen and my review will be posted on Essentially Italian tomorrow. Watch out for it. I savored this one as I revisited some of my favorite characters as they got caught up once again in a dangerous situation.

Read my reviews of the series:

Roma Underground
Wasp's Nest
Threading the Needle
Turning to Stone

Today, I have the pleasure of featuring Gabriel Valjan as I interview him about this fun and intelligent series. Read on and make sure to enter the giveaway below!


My Interview with Gabriel Valjan



LCR: Welcome to Library of Clean Reads. The Roma Series has become one of my favorite series. Did you plan to make this a series before writing the first book or did it just evolve into one after publishing?

GV: Thank you for reading and for the compliment. The Roma Series began as a provocation from a coworker: create and write about a compelling female protagonist. At the time, Alias was a hit on television and I was just entering the world of Andrea Camilleri’s Salvo Montalbano. The short story, however, focused on a woman named Alabaster and her employer, Rendition. The rest came much later. When I was completing Roma, Underground, I realized that I wanted to continue my foray into Italian culture.

LCR: How did you come up with the idea of a woman hacker taking on the Italian mafia with a group of dedicated law enforcers?

GV: The idea of engaging the mafia had not been my original intention. Rendition investigated white- collar crime. While I do think Italy and the mafia are unfortunately synonymous, I was more intrigued by apprehending and prosecuting criminals for crimes that are lacking in legislation. In researching the mafia, I realized that it is structurally medieval in organization, but modern in practice. The Sicilian mafia, for example, is international, corporate, and involved in both legal and illegal enterprises.

I created a female character because I was tired of reading male action figures, or females who were disguised revisions of male characters. I intended Bianca to be intelligent, a tech, and a dimensional character with strengths and weaknesses.

LCR: Being Italian-Canadian, I am constantly impressed with your knowledge of the Italian culture. To what do you attribute this?

GV: Thank you for the compliment. I do research and I am fortunate to have a cultural editor, Claudio Ferrara, who is a journalist and a linguist. It helps that I have traveled to Italy and spent time there. What I hope carries over to the reader is my empathy and openness to Italian culture. Most Americans have a distorted view of Italian culture, and I try to show Italy’s diversity. Few people know, for example, that Italy is a manufacturing giant and peerless when it comes to electronics for space exploration.

LCR: After reading Corporate Citizen Book #5 in the series, I was thrilled that you have Crunch City Book #6 coming up next. Do you plan on continuing the series after Book #6 or will you decide to end it?

GV: I do plan to continue the Series. Without giving any spoilers from Book #5, I will state that Crunch City is the last time that readers will see Bianca in an English-speaking environment. That decision is an aesthetic and emotional decision on her part about where she feels ‘home and family’ exists for her.

LCR: Can you tell me more about any other works in process?

GV: My publisher, Winter Goose Publishing, has accepted another series that I created. The Company Files is a multi-book series about the early days of the intelligence community. This series draws from real history and individuals. The writing style is very different from that of the Roma Series. I would describe it as le Carré meets Chandler.

LCR: Who are your favorite authors and what have you read recently that is noteworthy?

GV: This is a difficult question to answer because I read broadly. I have to confess that I’ve been very frustrated with ‘Contemporary Fiction’ because I find many of the authors try so hard to be ‘literary’, by which I mean they try to impress me with their prose or their allusions, as opposed to getting out of their own way and telling me a good story. Quite a few of these books have won prestigious awards and praise and, frankly, I just don’t get it. I read for Character, and many of the books I have picked up or had recommended to me have unlikeable people, or little transformation in the overall arc of story and character. I also find that many of these novels have depressing stories in which life only gets worse and worse — and I do think that such novels are easier to write and less imaginative. I’ll read a book that is a difficult journey. I’ll accept that an ending will not be all sparkles and unicorns, but I don’t care for nihilism, where I have to reach for Thorazine to recover from the time spent between the covers. In all fairness, there are some incredible authors out there in YA, Fantasy, and Historical Fiction. The challenge is finding them. I love finding a new author and reading all their work.

I just recently finished Camilleri’s Montalbano’s First Case. Here, what I found interesting is that the author, after writing twenty novels with the title character, had to ‘regress’ and create an immature, less experienced Montalbano. I’ve also been revisiting Herman Wouk’s Winds of War and binging on the miniseries. Wouk is a forgotten master at storytelling.

LCR: If you were to travel back in time, where would you go?

GV: This is a tough call. A part of me would like to travel back to the American Revolutionary War era and witness firsthand what went wrong with the founding principles of my own country. While America is, indeed, a republic and patrician elites had created it, I think they would be appalled by what has become of the government. Another part of me would like to live in Dante’s era because the worldview is antithetical to our ‘modern’ one.


LCR: Where do you see yourself in five years from now?

Still writing, but I hope with more books and more readers. I want to look back five years from now and see that I am a better writer.

LCR: Thank you so much!



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