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Paperback Fatal Remedies Book

ISBN: 0099269309

ISBN13: 9780099269304

Fatal Remedies

(Book #8 in the Commissario Brunetti Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

'Donna Leon has established Commissario Guido Brunetti as one of the most engaging of fictional detectives ... Brunetti is ... back on track, sadder perhaps, but wiser and wittier than ever.' Sunday... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Donna Leon, Not a Gondola In Sight

Donna Leon now makes Venice her home. In her mysteries, if you know Venice well, you'll have the thrill of rediscovery as she walks you through familiar campos, stroll by the Grand Canal, take a vaporetto to a destination, eat local pastries and foods. Her detective inspector hero is Commissario Brunetti who has a loving wife, two great kids, and a great home life, but is always at odds with his superiors. He likes those Venetian pastries and all the great food and seems lethargic, but he is far from being slow-witted. In this outing his wife on two occasions as a protest throws a rock through the window of a travel agency that caters to sex tourists. This causes her husband great sorrow and embarrassment, but he is even more aggravated when a murder connected to her action takes place. The book's title is very appropriate to the plot. In the beginning is the description of a clever game. When the staff attends boring meetings, they play buzz word bingo. When the meeting's chairman says a certain buzz word, they can relieve boredom by matching the buzz word up with specially prepared cards that have the buzz words instead of bingo numbers. The narrative rolls along smoothly as the gentle, kindly, philosophical Brunetti copes with police work as well as the corruption and inefficiency of the Italian state. Brunetti says, "There are days when I think everything's getting worse, then there are days when I know they are. But then the sun comes out, and I change my mind." This mystery has a very sharp depiction of the women characters and female psychology. It even has a gun fight. But in general Leon's mysteries have more reflection than action. This is one of her better efforts with a clear cut narrative. Venice is the key setting, but not as much of a character in this book as in some of her others. Little asides about the water damage and dampness in the hallways of buildings makes us realize how fragile the city's infrastructure is. Brunetti is an anti-hero that you come to like because he's an old-fashioned, amiable soul adrift in a society that has, in many ways, passed him by.

The Post-America World

This is an excellently-written and entertaining view of how the balance of world power and influence is likely to change in the coming decades. It presents a sensible, balanced and persuasive case for the increasing influence of emerging countries such as China and India, without in any way creating an alarmist scenario for the future of America.

Donna Leon leads a high mystery parade!

Donna Leon's eighth novel in her Commissario Guido Brunetti series is another crown of glory for this American writer. In "Fatal Remedies," Leon, ever the one to keep her readers' absolute attention riveted to all details, continues her intriguing mise en scene mysteries with sharp focus, clarity of detail, and powerful character observations. This book is well worth the wait. Leon begins with a new twist: Brunetti's wife Paola has been arrested for smashing the window of a travel agency which she knows arranges sex-tours to third-world countries where Westerners exploit, especially, the child-for-sex trade. This is an issue which Paola finds she cannot permit to go unnoticed, having two children of her own. Like Antigone, her sense of moral outrage at an issue the state does nothing about extends to the point where she takes the law into her own hands. Through her personal crusade, she hopes to call attention to this social canker and, with public outrage she hopes to generate this evil will be halted. She believes that she is prepared to take the consequences for her own actions. It is not so simple, she finds out. Unfortunately, she discovers that her own crusade has negative ramifications for her family and that instead of halting one injustice, she appears to be compounding another by hurting the ones she loves....Brunetti is called back to work and the chase begins. Brunetti, whose passion for truth, justice, equality, and respect for his beloved Venice, finds himself once again forced to confront moral and legal dilemmas. Leon is at her best and "Fatal Remedies" doesn't miss a beat as the pace picks up, page by page...Leon is not one to dodge social and contemporary issues, as her readers well know from previous books. Her views on environmental destruction (and how the Italian government and its citizens view the subject), social and political corruption, and such social issues as sex-tourism and the importation of former East Bloc citizens to work the local prostitution trade are readily identified. And the author is not timid in her criticism. It's not that she is indicting Italy and the Italians, but that these ills seem to be pervasive. Leon, an American, lives in Venice and knows the Italians well, but she has lived in other countries (previously she had taught English at an American university at the Vicenza U.S. Army post) and is well versed on contemporary issues. And she loves Venice. Each of her novels tenders her feelings for the Most Serene Republic and readers cannot escape without feeling the life, the very essence of Venice, and her knowledge of that city's history and its ethnic origins make her books ring with a resonance that is real yet we know her story is "only a novel." In "Fatal Remedies," Leon counts on her readers to assume much (in fact, a first-time reader may be confused by references that are clear only from having read earlier works), which is a shortcoming of individual works in such series; however,

The petty crimes of Paola Brunetti

Paola Brunetti, the Commissario's brilliant and caring wife, goads him into doing something about the terrible problem of marketing child prostitutes to tourists and businessmen. Much to Guido's chagrin, however, the methods she uses to focus attention upon this atrocity are not quite within the law. Following the demands of his own conscience, however, Guido juggles personal and professional complications to try to see that justice is done, never an easy task when the Mafia and big money are involved.

moral dilemmas

Donna Leon writes mysteries set in Venice. Her themes and plot treatments differ from the run-of-the-mill by their focus on moral dilemmas. In Fatal Remedies, there are several such. Guido's wife Paola has decided to take action against the outrageous sex/travel trade to Asia, which involves the exploitation and abuse of young girls. The means she settles upon are in strong and direct conflict with her husband's career and his need to uphold the law regardless of his personal feelings. Leon explores the nature of their marital relationship and the need of husband and wife to maintain separate identities with the freedom of action that that requires. Guido is a profoundly moral man who understands how to love, in contrast to the popularly accepted image of the Italian male. The solution of this novel's crimes and conflicts is surprising, believable, and anything but trite. Character is what makes Leon's writing so satisfying.
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