Monday, April 18, 2016
Edithsbookpicks: Donna Leon:The Waters of Eternal Youth, 978178...
Edithsbookpicks: Donna Leon:The Waters of Eternal Youth, 978178...: Donna Leon: The Waters of Eternal Youth, 9781785150753 , Penguin Random House, William Heinemann, 13.99 L Donna Leon has been my ...

Donna Leon:
The Waters of Eternal Youth, 9781785150753 , Penguin Random House, William
Heinemann, 13.99 L
Donna Leon has been my indulgence for a long time; I
adore her best-selling Brunetti mysteries taking a mental trip to Venice every
time I read them knowing I am in for a few hours of reading pleasure. I had the
great fortune of meeting her personally one time during my years at Penguin;
she is such a pleasant person with a twinkle in her eyes and many booksellers I
spoke to who had her over for readings reported the same. I tried her non-Brunetti
novels but found them not even close in quality to my beloved Brunetti novels.

When Brunetti is invited to one of his mother- in-laws
famous dinners at their grand palazzo, he discovers the dinner has been
arranged with a purpose in mind. Contessa Lando-Continui, an old friend of the
family, wants Brunetti to re-open an old case, involving her grand-daughter Manuela
who nearly drowned as a teenager after falling into one of the canals. She survived
after being resuscitated but suffered severe brain damage remaining mentally
retarded as a consequence of her injuries, staying trapped in the eternal youth
of a 7 year old despite being in her Thirties now. The Contessa still has serious doubts that
everything was done to discover the truth and wants to find out what really happened
to her only grandchild. The police
declared the case an accident years ago believing she fell accidentally into the
water. Feeling sympathy for the Contessa and being intrigued at the same time, Brunetti
tricks his superior into allowing him to reopen the case and soon finds that
not everything rhymes. When Brunetti meets the Contessa to find out about
Manuela’s character before the accident, he learns she was an accomplished
equestrian and also deathly afraid of water only able to walk in the middle of
bridges making sure she never got even close to water’s edge – a nightmare for
any Venetian, thus making a suicide or fall a very unlikely scenario. He also
learns that the local drunk who rescued Manuela was never interviewed, being considered
too demented and drunk to make a stable witness. I do not want to give away too
much of the story but smooth and elegantly as ever, Brunetti sets up his final trap for the one
person who can really tell him the truth.
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