RIP Michael Dibdin

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
From this link:

http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-dibdin13apr13,0,5374097.story?coll=la-home-obituaries

"Michael Dibdin, 60; crime fiction writer
By Jocelyn Y. Stewart, Times Staff Writer
April 13, 2007


Michael Dibdin, a British-born writer of crime fiction whose series of books about an enigmatic Venetian detective are noted for their skillful plotting and their reflections on Italian politics and society, died March 30 at a hospital in Seattle, said his stepdaughter, Emma Marris. Dibdin was 60.

The family declined to state the cause of death.

Published in 1988, "Ratking" was Dibdin's first novel featuring the detective Aurelio Zen. The book, which centers on the kidnapping of a wealthy industrialist and the detective assigned to get him back, was inspired in part by an incident at the University of Perugia in Italy, where Dibdin taught English in the 1980s.

A new program director was hired and Dibdin and others of the old regime were shown the door. Dibdin found work as an editor of the Oxford English Dictionary in England but realized that he wanted to "write about that mentality" he had experienced in Italy, he told a reporter for the Globe and Mail newspaper.

"And that's what Italian society is…. It's collusion," he said. "They're all guilty. There's always a deal being made. 'I know you're corrupt and you know I'm corrupt, and I know you know,' etc."

The novel received the Crime Writers' Assn.'s Gold Dagger Award and began a long relationship between readers and Zen. Dibdin wrote 10 novels featuring his character, each set in a different Italian city, and seven other crime novels. The release of his 11th Zen novel, "End Games," is expected this year.

Reviewers often mentioned Dibdin's elegant prose and his ability to describe locales vividly and accurately. "Dibdin can capture the sense of place with the swift poetic accuracy of Lawrence Durrell, and Venice, its people, manners and mores are the center of a book," Charles Champlin wrote in a 1995 Times review of "Dead Lagoon."

Critics described Zen as cynical and urbane, and Dibdin said the character sometimes surprised even him. In a 2000 interview with CBS' "Sunday Morning," Dibdin read a passage that described Zen:

"It was a face that gave nothing away yet seemed always to tremble on the brink of some expression that never quite appeared. Zen's subjects found themselves shut up with a man who barely seemed to exist, yet who mirrored back to them the innermost secrets of their hearts."

Dibdin was born March 21, 1947, in Wolverhampton, England, and spent part of his childhood in Northern Ireland.

His first book, "The Last Sherlock Holmes Story," was published in 1978 and sold only about 270 copies, Dibdin once said.

In the mid-1990s Dibdin married American crime fiction writer Kathrine Beck, known to readers as K.K. Beck, and moved to Seattle. In addition to Beck, Dibdin is survived by his father, Frederick John Dibdin, of Chichester, England; two daughters from previous marriages; and three stepchildren."

Damn - just read the Aurelio Zen series last fall.

MsLaura, Friday, 13 April 2007 16:23 (eighteen years ago)

Still not started these.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Sunday, 15 April 2007 14:21 (eighteen years ago)

three years pass...

never read the zen series, but the bbc adaptations are exceptionally good as tv dramas go so far.

all i gotta do is akh nachivly (darraghmac), Sunday, 16 January 2011 22:16 (fourteen years ago)

idk, watched the first one & sort of enjoyed it - looked great, but felt like Sewell didn't do much except pull faces and get told things.

ALSO distracted to the point of madness by the fact that some characters had Italian accents and others didn't. It doesn't make any sense.

portrait of velleity (woof), Monday, 17 January 2011 10:25 (fourteen years ago)

I saw a big display of these in Waterstone's the other day and was wondering why. I rattled through a pile of these once when I was ill years ago, but haven't gone back since. My dad swears by them.

Ismael Klata, Monday, 17 January 2011 10:51 (fourteen years ago)

i've been complaining about the series on the police procedurals thread. i probably haven't given them a fair chance because they've taken a few too many liberties with the books, but it's the awful dialogue that wore me down in the end. i mean, a police chief who says: "i want results!" really?

joe, Monday, 17 January 2011 11:01 (fourteen years ago)

two weeks pass...

Found it in the end.

Quite like the Dibdin novels, especially the early stuff. Not really sure the comedy works quite as well, although Cosi Fan Tutti is an interesting idea. Seemed to me the tv series completely missed the point: Zen is world weary, and romantic or quixotic, rather than the Bond like reticence and probity of Sewell, he solves his problems by accident sorta, but not in the wandering around pouting until the solution lands in your lap way of the TV series. And there isn't the inscrutability of the Italian characters, the sense of the impenetrable and kafkaesque world of the questura and the politicians and criminals.

Herr Kapitan Pugvosh (GamalielRatsey), Monday, 31 January 2011 12:43 (fourteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.