Book Reviews

The Book of Hidden Things by Francesco Dimitri

Tagline: ‘The tension between friends, combined with the suspense of what will happen next, will keep you entertained through the whole book. You will find yourself desperate to find out what happens next’.

Hello there, and welcome to another book review. I said I would try not to leave it so long between blog posts this time, and here we are – two blog posts in two weeks! Sadly, I cannot promise that there will be a blog post every week (as much as I would love to be able to), but I want to try to get as quick a turnaround as possible. Anyway, that is quite enough babbling – now onto the actual blog post.

Today, I will be reviewing The Book of Hidden Things by Francesco Dimitri (again, hopefully you already know this from the title, and actually know what you are here for). This book has been on my very long list of ‘to be read’ books (who doesn’t have an ever increasing to be read list?) for a while, but it is finally one I can put onto my read list (one book down, only an infinite number of books left to go). So, was it worth it? Let’s find out.

Background
The book starts with ‘the pact’ made between four friends (Art, Mauro, Tony, and Fabio) from Casalfranco, a small town in Southern Italy. The four friends were once very close, however, they all went their separate ways and left Casalfranco (with the exception of Art, who returned). To keep the friendship going, however, they made a pact in which they all agreed to meet at American Pizza, a restaurant is Casalfranco, once a year (because who doesn’t love a good pizza place). Apart from last year (when Fabio decided not to go), they have kept the pact going all these years.

This year, however, Art has not turned up. To people outside their friend group, this might not sound too strange – friendships grow apart all the time and, afterall, Fabio chose not to come last year. Inside this friendship group, however, they knew that there was something amiss. Art was the one who came up with the idea of the pact, and was never one to miss an appointment. Worse still, this is not the first time that Art has gone missing.

It was ten years earlier that Art first went missing for 7 days. There was no trace of him, and the other friends quickly became prime suspects for the kidnapping (and possible murder) of Art. Until Art suddenly came back, claiming that he just needed to find out if he could escape Casalfranco and was pleased when he found out he could. His friends, however, know that this is a nonsense excuse, but Art refused to tell them the real reason for his disappearance. They suspect that something horrible must have happened to Art, something which he cannot even voice, something which changed Art for the rest of his life.

Back to present day, his friends try to find out what happened to Art without getting themselves in so deep that they cannot escape. However, when they find out that Art has been dealing weed, and has been involved with the Sacra Corona Unita (a large local criminal network), they end up in a position that they can either find out what happened to Art, or they can avoid getting themselves in too deep – but they cannot do both. They chose the first option.

The three remaining friends find themselves getting involved with the Sacra Corona Unita, pushing the limits of their own friendships in doing so. In their investigation of Art’s disappearance the friendship group will suffer betrayal, broken hearts, and one of the biggest tests that their friendships have faced. They must risk it all if they are to find out what happened to Art.

Review – 4 and a half stars 4½ Stars ✯✯✯✯(+1/2)
At the start, I asked if this book was worth it… Yes, yes it was worth it.

This book left me hanging off the edge of my seat (usually on the seat of the bus into/from work) for most of the time that I was reading it. The tension between friends, combined with the suspense of what will happen next, will keep you entertained through the whole book. You will find yourself desperate to find out what happens next.

It is difficult for me to provide a full review of what was good about this book without giving any spoilers, but I really enjoyed where they took the story, and how the story ended. And I do not want to give spoilers because I believe that the book is a better read if you don’t know what happened so you can, while reading, come up with your own theories about what you think happened to Art – and this is another thing I enjoyed about the book, as it gave you just enough information to do that.

Another thing is that, while the friends are sufficiently similar to be able to get along (despite their disagreements), they are also largely different, and so I think that different people will like and dislike different members of the friendship group (on a sidenote, that would be a great question for a book club – which friend did you most closely align to, and why). These are the reasons why I give this book four and a half stars.

I hope you enjoyed my review of The Book of Hidden Things– if you have read it and would like to share your thoughts, or would like to suggest my next read, then feel free comment down below. If you wish to see more of my reviews in future, please do follow/like/other – my social media pages are available on the ‘Contact & Social Media’ tab at the top of the page.

TBT