Sunday, April 9, 2017

Earthly Remains - Donna Leon


Commissario Guido Brunetti needs a vacation.  In order to stop one of his policemen from making a serious mistake, Brunetti fakes a heart attack.  The doctors, however, tell him he needs to take a break  from the constant stress of his job.  A relative of Paola's has a villa on one of the islands, so Brunetti goes there, alone, for two weeks.

His plan is to read and swim and ride bicycle and isolate himself from the world.  He discovers that the man who maintains the villa, Davide Casati, was a friend of his late father's.  They had rowed together.  Casati asks Brunetti if he'd like to row.  They spend their days rowing in the lagoon and visiting Casati's beeshives.  Casati says his bees are dying.  He says that he killed them and that he killed his wife, who died of cancer.  Brunetti doesn't understand why he says that.  Casati disappears after a storm and his daughter asks Brunetti to find him.

I read my first Donna Leon / Brunetti mystery in 1999, so I'm a long-time fan.  Several of her recent books have dealt with the gradual destruction of Venice and the lagoon from climate change, pollution, and the dumping of toxic waste.  I still enjoy the books and I appreciate Leon's emphasis on environmental and ethical issues.   But I miss Paola, with her constant reading and cooking, who appears only briefly in these later books.  These books introduced me to prosecco, so, thank you, Donna Leon!

4 comments:

  1. I haven't read any of her books so far, but I still found prosecco! I'll definitely try her though.

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    1. I like her early books best. There was more of Brunetti's family life. Paola, his wife, is an English professor who loves Henry James. She's often lying on the sofa reading, but she can still whip up a mouthwatering lunch or dinner. Maybe I actually hate Paola!

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  2. I have only read the first two books in this series. But I have a few more of the earlier ones to read.

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    1. I almost never re-read, although I plan to read all of Louise Penny's Inspector Gamache books again, in order this time. But my recollection is that I liked Leon's earlier books better than some of her later ones. But they're all pretty good in my opinion. She writes well.

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