Wednesday, February 14 2024 @ 7 pm in Susman Room
Mario and Douglas Preston at the site of the double-homicide in Vicchio, Italy, where the Monster murdered a young couple, Pia Rotini and Claudio Stefanacci. Source.
Douglas Preston (1956 - ) is an American journalist and author. Although he is best known for his thrillers in collaboration with Lincoln Child (including the Agent Pendergast series and Gideon Crew series), he has also written six solo novels, including the Wyman Ford series and a novel entitled Jennie, which was made into a movie by Disney. He has authored a half-dozen nonfiction books on science and exploration and writes occasionally for The New Yorker, Smithsonian, and other magazines. Source.
Mario Spezi (1945 – 2016) was an Italian journalist, author, illustrator, and caricaturist. He wrote the non-fiction true crime books Dolci Colline di Sangue (2006) and Il Mostro di Firenze (1983). He was a co-author in the book The Monster of Florence A True Story (2008) with American author Douglas Preston. Additionally, he was credited by Preston for providing details used in the novel Brimstone. Source.
1. Pietro Pacciani was convicted of being the Monster of Florence after an exhaustive investigation. Later he was acquitted. On p. 157, a highly placed carabinieri officer shared a theory of criminal justice with Mario Spezi. He said, “Have you ever considered that [Pietro] Pacciani’s trial might be nothing more than a case of the acquisition and management of power?” What did he mean by that statement? Who acquired and managed power in the course of this case? How did that power serve them?
2. Douglas Preston and Mario Spezi make a compelling case that Antonio Vinci could be the Monster of Florence. Do you agree with their assessment? Many in the Italian establishment have asserted that a satanic cult (or their hired help) committed the murders. Preston and Spezi disagree with that theory. What do you think? Based on what you have read, can you envision any other, different theory that would fit the facts? If you could question any suspect on the list, whom would you want to interrogate? What would you want to know?
3. How important is “journalistic privilege”? Why do you think journalists wish to keep their sources and research secret? In 2005 when Valerie Plame was exposed as a covert CIA officer in the news, a grand jury was convened to investigate how information about Plame was leaked to journalists. Subsequently, Judith Miller, a reporter for the New York Times, was jailed for contempt of court when she refused to reveal her source. Miller was quoted as saying, “If journalists cannot be trusted to guarantee confidentiality, then journalists cannot function and there cannot be a free press.” Do you agree with this statement? Do you think there are times when a journalist should reveal his or her information? When and why? Do you think Preston should have asserted journalistic privilege in his interrogation?
4. Preston was interrogated and accused of several crimes associated with the Monster case while Spezi was jailed and accused of being the Monster himself. Chart the path of their relationship. What actions did they take that led to their harassment by the Italian judicial system? What mistakes did they make?
5. On p. 141, Spezi describes how he went to meet with Arturo Minoliti to ask the caribinieri marshal about his doubts regarding the investigation against Pacciani. Spezi was wearing recording equipment underneath his clothes for this meeting, even though he “always had deep misgivings about this type of journalism and he had often sworn he would never do it. It was dirty, it was shaking down someone for a scoop.” Do you agree that it is dirty? How far do you think a journalist should go for the sake of information? Can you think of examples where journalists did not go far enough? What about examples where journalists went too far? At what point does the quest for the truth become unethical and turn foul?
6. Ruggero Perugini is accused by carabinieri marshal Arturo Minoliti of planting evidence in the garden of Pietro Pacciani—a bullet cartridge casing—that implicated Pacciani in the murder. Why do you think an officer like Perugini would choose to plant evidence, if he in fact did so?
7. Preston and Spezi have spoken of feeling obsessed with the case. They went to great lengths, at high personal risk and expense, to investigate the evidence and see the Monster exposed and caught. Do you think there is a point where such obsession can become negative? Preston and Spezi were so determined to find the killer that they followed up dubious reports that the killer had hidden evidence in locked iron boxes—and this led them into a disastrous entanglement with the police. Chart the progression of their investigation. Do you think their pursuit of the iron boxes was a reasonable quest? Or do you think that their obsession made them vulnerable to believing a false story? Have you ever believed this passionately in a truth that others did not see? How far would you go to achieve your goals?
8. How much, if anything, did you know about the case of the Monster of Florence before reading Preston and Spezi’s book? A number of cities in the United States have suffered from the crimes of serial killers. What did you feel when you read about a case that was so famous in Italy, but had little coverage in the United States until recently? What does it mean to you to imagine a serial killer plaguing countries abroad like this?
9. Count Niccolò Capponi explained to Preston the theory of dietrologia, that Italians often think “the obvious thing cannot be the truth.” What role has dietrologia played in the Monster of Florence investigation? Do you think Americans also have a culture of dietrologia?
10. Some reviewers complained that the book lacked a satisfying ending, in that the identity of the Monster of Florence is never definitively established. Do you think this is a flaw in the book? Does a good work of nonfiction have an obligation to provide a neat ending? Is the truth in all its messy incompleteness sufficient?
11. The Monster is a convoluted and tortuous story, spanning more than forty years, involving many investigators, suspects, victims, ancillary characters --- and two narrators. The authors confront this complexity with an unusual literary structure, breaking the book into two parts, the first told largely in the third person, the second largely in the first person. Do you think this structure works? Do you have any thoughts on other ways the book could have been structured?
12. In a recent essay, Preston wrote: “The Monster of Florence is not just a book about a serial killer or a bungled investigation; it is a book about modern Italy itself.” Do you agree? What does the Monster story reveal about the character of modern Italy --- both positive and negative?
The Monster of Florence, is the literal translation of the ‘Mostro di Firenze’, the name given to the person responsible for the death of at least 14 people near Florence between 1974 and 1985.
The case is considered one of criminology's most baffling mysteries with an investigation spanning over 40 years.
Despite the fact that the Italian authorities sought out the help of expert investigators, criminologists, psychologists, and sociologists from all over the world, the case has remained a puzzle with no solution.
Although there have been trials in the Monster of Florence case, and 2 men sent to prison, the Mostro di Firenze is still considered a cold case.
Florence
Borgo San Lorenzo