Maurizio de Giovanni Books in Order
Browse Maurizio de Giovanni books in order, with series overviews and short summaries to help you explore Commissario Ricciardi and other Naples crime novels.
Last updated: December 25, 2025
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Publication Order
21 books
Volver
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2024
In July 1940, with Italy at war, Ricciardi has moved his daughter Marta and her Jewish grandparents to his native village of Fortino, hoping for safety. An old crime in the surrounding hills resurfaces while, back in Naples, Maione fights to save a friend from execution.
Soledad
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2023
December 1939 brings both looming war and preparations for Christmas in Naples. When the vibrant Erminia Cascetta is killed in the apartment she shares with her bedridden mother, Ricciardi and Maione explore families hollowed out by loneliness to find who could not bear her hunger for life.
Caminito
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2022
In a tense Neapolitan spring as Europe edges toward war, Ricciardi is called to a grove where two young lovers lie dead. Balancing fears for his small daughter and concern for antifascist friends, he searches for the thread that links passion, politics, and revenge.
Il pianto dell'alba
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2019
In the sweltering summer of 1934, just as Ricciardi finally seems to glimpse a peaceful future, a high ranking German officer is murdered and suspicion falls on someone from the commissario's past. The case forces him to weigh duty against loyalty and love.
Il purgatorio dell'angelo
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2018
On the rocky shoreline of Posillipo, the body of Father Angelo, a much loved elderly priest, is found brutally killed. While Maione hunts a skilled gang of thieves, Ricciardi digs into decades of confessions and quiet compromises to learn why a man seen as a saint was targeted.
Winter Swallows
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2017
As Naples readies for New Year, aging stage star Michelangelo Gelmi shoots his wife during their nightly act when a live round replaces a blank. Commissario Ricciardi probes jealousies, fading fame and backstage rivalries to learn who really loaded the gun.
Nameless Serenade
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2016
A respected shop owner is found dead in the street, and suspicion falls on Vincenzo Sannino, a former boxing hero who lost both his career and the woman he loved to the victim. Under Fascist pressure, Ricciardi must decide whether the obvious suspect is guilty.
Bread
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2016
When a beloved baker known as the Prince of Dawn is shot in his shop, the killing looks like Mafia retribution. Inspector Lojacono and the Bastards of Pizzofalcone follow a trail through rival bakers, family tensions, and television fame to see who really profited from his death.
Puppies
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2015
A newborn baby is left in a box beside a dumpster near the Pizzofalcone station, and soon a young woman is found dead while pets vanish from the neighborhood. The Bastards chase linked clues through migrant households and back alleys toward an unnervingly cold form of cruelty.
Glass Souls
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2015
A proud countess begs Ricciardi to reopen a homicide case that the police have already closed. Investigating in secret, he moves between salons and slums while wrestling with his own isolation, uncovering how fragile pride and buried grudges can drive people to violence.
The Bottom of Your Heart
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2014
During a brutal Neapolitan heat wave and a major religious festival, a famous gynecologist plunges from his hospital office window. Ricciardi and Maione sift through infidelity, professional rivalries, and old grievances to learn whether the fall was suicide, accident, or carefully planned murder.
Cold for the Bastards of Pizzofalcone
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2014
In the bitter Neapolitan winter, a couple are discovered shot to death in a filthy apartment on the wrong side of town. Under political pressure and media glare, Lojacono and his misfit squad must solve the case quickly if they hope to save their damaged precinct.
The Bastards of Pizzofalcone
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2013
After four corrupt officers are arrested, the Pizzofalcone station is restaffed with problem cops from across Naples. Their first test comes when a prominent charity patron is murdered, forcing Lojacono and his new colleagues to prove they are more than the failures everyone expects.
Darkness for the Bastards of Pizzofalcone
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2013
A child is kidnapped and a luxury apartment is burgled on the same day, two crimes that seem unrelated until Lojacono looks closer. As the Bastards work both cases, they collide with wealthy families, street crime, and their own fears about loyalty and parenthood.
Viper
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2012
At the high class brothel called Paradiso, the city's most sought after prostitute, known as Viper, is found suffocated in her bed a week before Easter 1932. Ricciardi must untangle the desires and resentments of clients and coworkers to discover who wanted her silenced.
The Crocodile
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2012
Exiled from Sicily to Naples after a false Mafia accusation, Inspector Lojacono spends his days shuffling papers until a teenager is gunned down. A sniper the press calls the Crocodile is hunting the children of single parents, and Lojacono must read the killer's grief as well as the clues.
By My Hand
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2011
Just before Christmas, a Fascist militia officer and his wife are slaughtered in their elegant Naples apartment, apparently by two different killers. Following a trail of humiliation, extortion, and betrayal, Ricciardi and Maione confront suspects whose suffering may rival that of the dead.
Day of the Dead
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2010
During the autumn week when Naples honors its dead, a street child is found lifeless on church steps. With his unsettling gift suddenly silent, Ricciardi investigates in secret while officials prepare for Mussolini's visit and do everything they can to avoid acknowledging a murder.
Everyone in Their Place
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2009
The beautiful Duchess of Camparino is shot in her apartment as summer crowds fill Naples. Ricciardi and Maione navigate Fascist politics, gossip columns, and bitter household feuds to decide whether love, money, or power truly lay behind the killing.
Blood Curse
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2008
An elderly fortune teller and moneylender, Carmela Calise, is beaten to death in her cramped apartment. Ricciardi and Maione uncover a web of clients and debtors whose futures she manipulated, forcing them to ask who hated her enough to end both her schemes and her life.
I Will Have Vengeance
by Maurizio de Giovanni
2007
At Naples's San Carlo theater, one of the world's greatest tenors is found murdered in his dressing room on a bitter March night in 1931. Surrounded by jealous colleagues and nervous Fascist officials, Ricciardi tracks motive through rivalries, politics, and obsessive fans.
Where should I start?
If you want to begin with Ricciardi's early cases: I Will Have Vengeance → Blood Curse → Everyone in Their Place → The Day of the Dead.
If you like character driven historical noir: By My Hand → Viper → The Bottom of Your Heart → Glass Souls.
If you prefer contemporary police procedurals: The Crocodile → The Bastards of Pizzofalcone → Darkness for the Bastards of Pizzofalcone → Cold for the Bastards of Pizzofalcone.
If you are catching up on the later Ricciardi novels: Nameless Serenade → Winter Swallows → Il purgatorio dell'angelo → Il pianto dell'alba.
Author bio
Maurizio de Giovanni was born in Naples in 1958 and has spent most of his life in the city he writes about. Before crime novels and television adaptations, he worked in a bank, a steady job that paid the bills but did not answer his love of stories. He read everything he could find and shared sketch ideas with friends and coworkers.
In 2005 those colleagues entered him, almost as a dare, in a writing competition for unpublished mystery authors. De Giovanni set his piece in 1930s Naples and invented a police commissioner named Luigi Alfredo Ricciardi, a quiet man burdened with the ability to see the final moments of people who die violently. The story won, and it changed the course of his life.
The contest did more than recognize a promising story, it opened a door into a universe he has never really left.
The winning story grew into a first novel that Italian readers met under the title I Will Have Vengeance. That book opened the long running Commissario Ricciardi series, where each investigation unfolds against the backdrop of Fascist Italy. The books follow Ricciardi and his loyal colleague Brigadier Maione through cases that cut across class lines, from street kids and market sellers to opera stars and aristocrats.
As the series developed, de Giovanni leaned into the tension between Ricciardi's paranormal gift and his crippling loneliness. The commissario can see and hear the last instant of a victim's life, a talent that makes him an exceptional detective yet keeps him apart from other people. Across novels such as Blood Curse, Everyone in Their Place, The Day of the Dead, and The Bottom of Your Heart, the city itself becomes a recurring character, crowded, devout, and full of small compromises.
After establishing Ricciardi, de Giovanni turned to the Naples of today. In 2012 he published The Crocodile, a noir novel that introduces Inspector Giuseppe Lojacono, a Sicilian detective sent to Naples under a cloud of suspicion. Lojacono's sharp instincts and quiet humor carried naturally into a new ensemble series, The Bastards of Pizzofalcone, about a group of misfit cops trying to save a disgraced police station and, in a way, themselves.
Other series followed. He created the former secret agent Sara, the Naples social worker Mina Settembre, and a supernatural tinged cycle known as I guardiani. Several of these characters, along with Ricciardi and the Bastards of Pizzofalcone, have moved from the page to prime time in Italian television dramas, bringing de Giovanni's version of Naples to an even wider audience.
Beyond crime fiction, de Giovanni writes about the city's football culture and has produced essays and stories about historic matches of the Napoli team. He has also written for the stage, adapting works like One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and American Buffalo for Italian theaters and crafting original plays that were later turned into films.
Through all these projects he has stayed rooted in Naples, drawing on its streets, voices, and contradictions. His books are translated into many languages, yet they keep a close focus on ordinary people, their compromises, and their stubborn hope. Readers who meet his detectives often come for the mystery and stay for the way he writes about families, friendships, and the weight of memory.
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