Discover Donna Leon, the mystery writer who takes us to Venice
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Portare una passeggiata sul canale con Guido Brunetti
The Commissario Brunetti series is sometimes a police procedural, sometimes a whodunit, sometimes a comic opera, and occasionally plays like "Father does not know best". Brunetti has married into a privileged and titled family, which alternately aggravates and assists him. His wife Paola is a literature teacher and mother to his two children Raffi and Chiara. We get to go home with Brunetti for lunch and dinner as he escapes the petty bureaucracy of the Polizia. These trips home make the salivary glands work overtime as Leon describes the food and wine that flow onto the Brunetti family table. The table talk with family and the bedroom talk with Paolo provide a homely familial grounding for Brunetti.
I'm really glad that Donna Leon discovered and settled in Venice, the city surrounded by water. Otherwise Commissario Guido Brunetti of the Venice Polizia might have become Lieutenant George Brown of the Newark Police. That might have worked out, since Leon was born in New Jersey. But as an American expatriate in Venice for over 20 years, Donna Leon has absorbed the Venetian culture and sensibility and translated them beautifully into English.
When Brunetti goes to work, the comic opera takes over. He is a committed policeman. His selective morality allows him to negotiate the tricky path between his superior Vice-questore Patta, a buffoon who impedes, his wife's strong pull to the left and Brunetti's drive to bring some sort of justice to an often unjust society. Brunetti would be lost without policemen like Sergente Vianello to assist in the legwork and Signorina Elettra, Patta's secretary, who works research magic and can manipulate Patta.
The reality of daily life makes Guido Brunetti cynical, but his soul won't allow him to quit. Donna Leon writes the life of a man that you would like to know and spend time with. He is a perfect series character, and this is a great series. If you can't travel to Venice, this series is a very good trip for the mind.
Find Donna Leon's books
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About Face (A Commissario Guido Brunetti Mystery)
Price: $12.25
List Price: $24.00 |
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A Sea of Troubles
Price: $7.00
List Price: $14.00 |
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Fatal Remedies
Price: $7.99
List Price: $7.99 |
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The Girl of His Dreams
Price: $5.95
List Price: $14.00 |
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Friends in High Places
Price: $1.31
List Price: $7.99 |
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Quietly in Their Sleep
Price: $7.36
List Price: $14.00 |
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Blood from a Stone (Commissario Guido Brunetti Mysteries)
Price: $3.67
List Price: $7.99 |
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Death in a Strange Country (Commissario Guido Brunetti Mysteries)
Price: $7.96
List Price: $14.00 |
Recommendation
Savor the series, one book at a time. Use your library, Amazon, and used book stores to scout out the series. Most of Donna Leon books have been reprinted by US publishers in trade paperback editions.
Donna Leon bibliography
- Death at La Fenice, 1992
- Death in a Strange Country, 1993
- Dressed for Death (UK Title: The Anonymous Venetian), 1994
- Death and Judgement (Also published as: A Venetian Reckoning), 1995
- Death in High Water (Also published as: Acqua Alta), 1996
- The Death of Faith, 1997
- A Noble Radiance, 1998
- Fatal Remedies, 1999
- Friends in High Places (Silver Dagger Award), 2000
- A Sea of Troubles, 2001
- Willful Behaviour, 2002
- Uniform Justice, 2003
- Doctored Evidence, 2004
- Blood from a Stone, 2005
- Through a Glass, Darkly, 2006
- Suffer the Little Children, April 2007
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and you've visited some amazing places! Just discovered this comment, found your travel hubs and became a fan. Regards, Jack
These books sound wonderful! I love mysteries more for the characterization and the settings than for the whodunnit plotting. I am going to remember the name Donna Leon and look for her books! Thanks for a great hub.
hi bookwise, I'm drawn to authors that create a sense of time and place, like Donna Leon, Harold Adams, etc. Helps to be a good story teller also! Regards, Jack
Great post. Thanks. I had just picked up one of her novels while in Northern Italy. The bookstore owner reccommended it and said that her books sold pretty briskly to the tourists in his little resort town. Of interest, he said that this author will not allow this series to be translated into Italian and the suspicion is that she makes this choice because local Venice residents would be able to identify the real-life folks that the characers are based on!
Ellen
Ellen, thanks for the nice comment. Had not heard the story about not translating into Italian, but her characters are so juicy that you can image there are role models... regards, Jack











Amanda Kendle says:
2 years ago
Sound interesting, I'll have to try one! I do love to read stuff that's set in a place I've visited.