Destination Venice

If your interest is piqued by ancient cities with mazes of streets and canals, of hidden plots and secrets, then you must like reading about Venice.

The City of Falling Angels by John Berendt begins on January 29. 1996 the day the Fenice Opera is destroyed by fire. Berendt’s citizen interviews reveal the intricacies of customs, society, politics, the city’s decades of decay and preservation. Among them are Archimede Seguro, an aging glassblower who makes 100 vases depicting the fire as viewed from his window only feet away. Berendt learns much about Ezra Pound and Olga Rudge, his paramour, whose art collection disappeared in mystery from the home she still inhabited. The inside story of the Palazzo Barbaro (where scenes from Brideshead Revisited were filmed) and so much more brings Venice off the page in a chatty and informative way.

Travel back to the time following the 1527 sacking of Rome, as the wealthy courtesan Fiametta and her dwarf business partner, Bucino, flee to Venice, via In the Company of the Courtesan by Sarah Dunant. Fiametta was born in Venice and knows it well. Through the pair’s adventures we see the city at its height, become involved in their intricate moves and ploys to regain the style of living they abandoned to save their lives. Venice serves as both background and character, enriching the novel’s plot.

Venice is a favorite setting for novelists and travel writers alike: what are some of your favorite Venice books?

                           ~ Barbara

6 responses to “Destination Venice”

  1. Ooh!~ one of my favorite ‘Venice books’ (which also happens to be – together w/ Daisy Miller – one of the best introductions to Henry James for readers new to his work) is “The Aspern Papers.” This atmospheric novella about a literary scholar and the lengths he will go to in pursuit of his quarry is just drenched in the decadent, wabi-sabi side of Venice – the vapors and decay and overmuchness of it. Another memorable evocation of much the same close atmosphere is in Robert Girardi’s “Vaporetto 13,” a fairly effective ghost story.

  2. Jennifer

    The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke is a wonderful kids’ book set in Venice.

  3. Patricia Wrede’s second in her Regency Letters series “A Grand Tour: has some wonderfully evocative scenes set in Venice. I especially like the one where her heroine, a notable klutz, falls into the Grand Canal.

  4. Another excellent series that has Venice as its setting (and pretty much a character in the book as well) is Donna Leon’s Guido Brunetti mystery series. Leon captures the feel of the city through all its seasons, and has a great sense for the lives of people of La Serenissima. The series begins with Death at La Fenice

  5. Death in Venice by Thomas Mann of course! The novella’s story, made memorable for a large audience thanks to the eery 1971 film adaption by Visconti, is a wonderful example of fiction triggered by life. The imagination of the author set free, yet dramatically guided by the classics.
    Michael Cunningham’ introduction to the latest translation of the novella by Michael Henry Heim (Ecco – imprint of Harper Collins, 2004) is in itself of tremendous value for writers and readers alike.

  6. Fellow Venetophiles beware – Miss Manners/Judith Martin’s self-deprecating humor in “No Vulgar Hotel: the Desire and Pursuit of Venice” has us skewered. She lists famous people, books and movies set in La Serenissima and what’s wrong with them, and real insight on the city.

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