Delitto in una mattina di sabato
- 294pagine
- 11 ore di lettura
Questa serie di avvincenti gialli segue l'investigatore israeliano Michael Ohayon mentre si addentra in casi complessi. Ogni indagine lo immerge negli intricati mondi della psicologia umana e delle motivazioni nascoste. Ohayon deve svelare segreti che spesso rivelano non solo la verità dietro il crimine, ma anche dettagli intimi della sua vita. La serie combina magistralmente la suspense con una profonda intuizione psicologica.






A shocking double murder at Israel's leading academic institution sets Superintendent Michael Ohayon on a gripping investigation. As he delves into the case, he explores the complex nature of creativity, weaving a narrative that intertwines mystery with profound themes. Batya Gur, an award-winning author, crafts a compelling story that challenges perceptions and reveals the intricate connections between art and crime.
È in un letto dell'infermeria del kibbutz di cui era segretaria che viene trovata morta Osnat Harel, una bella donna sulla quarantina, le cui idee innovative e progressiste avevano dato uno scossone ai tradizionali principi di gestione della comunità. L'indagine, affidata a Michael Ohayon, un ispettore di polizia capace di leggere nel cuore delle persone, scava a fondo nella vita del kibbutz e ne fa emergere aspetti inquietanti e molti, inimmaginabili, segreti.
Fourth in a series of popular, intellectually challenging mysteries from acclaimed Israeli author Batya Gur, Murder Duet features once again the smart, charming, and lonely police officer Michael Ohayon. After his cellist friend's father and brother--who are also well-known musicians--are brutally murdered, Ohayon, a classical music afficionado, sets out to solve the crime. From the opening pages, where the detective plays a compact disc of Brahm's First Symphony, to the newly discovered music for an unknown Vivaldi requiem that provides a rock-solid motive for the crime, lovers of crime novels, as well as music, will thrill to every dulcet note.
The body of a young Yemeni woman is discovered in the attic of a Bethlehem Road house, in a Jerusalem neighborhood famous for its impenetrability to outsiders. The victim, once a beauty, is no longer lovely -- her face has been brutally smashed. More than the usual horror greets Chief Superintendent Michael Ohayon in the closed and inscrutable Baka, for an old love and an unfinished romance await him there as well. But much more is concealed beneath the surface of this gruesome homicide -- as tensions between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim, hostility between Arabs and Jews, the half-century-old business of kidnapped Yemenite children, and the al Aqsa Intifada of 2000 add fuel to a terrible fire that might never be contained.
When a woman's body is discovered in the wardrobe warehouses of Israel Television, Chief Superintendent Michael Ohayon embarks on a tangled and bloody trail of detection through the corridors and studios of Israel's official television station, and through the fears, loves, and contradictions of the people who work there. It is an eye-opening journey that brings into question the very ideals upon which Ohayon—and indeed the entire nation—was raised, ideals that may have led to terrible crimes.