Published in 1986, Giustizia by Friedrich Dürrenmatt is a philosophical crime narrative centered on a former prosecutor investigating an old murder case involving a powerful politician. The novel interrogates the limits of legal systems, the ambiguity of truth, and the function of justice within modern society. Structured as a retrospective inquiry, the story blurs fiction and metafiction, reflecting Dürrenmatt’s broader concerns with epistemology and moral relativism. Aimed at readers of literary fiction, philosophical novels, and legal critique, it exemplifies the author’s distinct narrative irony and ethical rigor.