My investigation of Italian Noir continues. Commissario Piero Trotti is a senior policeman in a provincial city off the River Po in about 1978. Italy is on high alert due to the activity of the Red Brigades and the kidnapping of former Prime Minister Moro. Trotti has several crimes to investigate - the kidnapping of a little girl (who happens to be his god daughter), the dismembered body of a local prostitute, and agitation by militant students as elections for this communist dominated City are due in a few weeks. They are all eventually linked - hence the convergence of the title, however Trotti is sent on multiple wild goose chases as he closes in on cause and culprit. As usual with this type of crime fiction there is a dysfunctional family back story - Trotti's wife is a neurotic depressive and a recurrent problem, and his sixteen year old daughter is suffering as well - not stated but it is implied she has anorexia. I enjoyed the novel and its setting, as usual despaired of the picture of Italy it paints (although this one is more political corruption than Mafia involvement), and was intrigued by the depth of national introspection created by the Moro murder and (in 1978) recent history of the Duce and WW II. The ending is however not great - Trotti solves the crime, but finds out that his boss is implicated in a cover up on behalf of the Communist Mayor of the City. Trotti decides to notify the authorities but we have no insight into the implications that arise for him or anyone. Trotti is a reasonably well described character, a little two dimensional in his habits, but no more so than, say, Jules Maigret was in the early novels. I will read the second novel at some stage (there are five).
Footnote: Timothy Williams contacted me to say: "The title of the book comes from Aldo Moro, whom I quote in the text: "The same people, Commissario, you can believe me, who were frightened by Moro's overtures to the Communists, by his 'converging parallels' and who had to have him destroyed at any cost. Politically destroyed.""