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96 of 102 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully written
This book was so good that I read it in one sitting. In this book Dunant returns to the place and time she does best: Renaissance Italy. This time the story takes place in Rome and Venice in 1527, and focuses upon Fiametta Bianchi and her dwarfish servant, Bucino Teodaldo. In the Company of the Courtesan is told from his point of view.

The book opens in Rome...
Published on March 3, 2006 by K. Huff

versus
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Diluted Sexuality in the Company of the Courtesan?
Dunant is a brilliant and poetic writer, which makes the book well worth the read. However, I agree with other reviewers that, for a book about sexuality and intrigue, it certainly lacks passion. While "The Birth of Venus" was provocative, this book was disappointingly tame. The most beautifully written passages of the book concern Bucino's thoughts and memories, and he...
Published on July 24, 2007 by A.Angelo


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96 of 102 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully written, March 3, 2006
This book was so good that I read it in one sitting. In this book Dunant returns to the place and time she does best: Renaissance Italy. This time the story takes place in Rome and Venice in 1527, and focuses upon Fiametta Bianchi and her dwarfish servant, Bucino Teodaldo. In the Company of the Courtesan is told from his point of view.

The book opens in Rome. Fiametta, a successful courtesan, leaves the city with her servant and goes to Venice, the city that was famous in this time period for the courtesans that lived there. Venice is a decadent city, filled with sin and vice, and it is through this that Bucino and his mistress must wade in order for her to be successful in her chosen profession. Along the way we run into a variety of interesting characters: a servant with sticky fingers; a Jew who lives in the Jewish ghetto of Venice; a blind healer called "La Draga;" a Turk who is fascinated by Bucino's size; the poet Aretino; the artist Titian; and a variety of Fiametta's clients. Many of the characters were, of course, real people; others, of course, were not. The story that Dunant creates, which mixes what really happened with fiction, is breathtaking.

This book is well-written, and very much like The Birth of Venus, Dunant's 2004 novel that is set in Florence at the end of the fifteenth century. In the Company of the Courtesan has the same kind of qualities, but is a great book in its own way.
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28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Richly Descriptive Period Piece., July 30, 2007
This book has most everything you would want in a period piece. It contains unique richly developed characters, intrigue, humor, & a deep plot. The sights, sounds, smells, & ambiance of 16th century Venice are almost lifelike. There is a fine mingling of social mores & politics that leads to many types of betrayal that keep the reader guessing. The author tells Fiammetta's story through the eyes of Bucino, a clever dwarf who shares her lodgings. He eventually will be the main character. The story begins in 1527 with the sacking of Rome. Fiammetta, is ravaged by the invaders & flees the city with Bucino{a loyal caretaker, & sardonic, resourceful spy}, with little else but the clothes on their backs, & some swallowed jewels. They reach Fiammetta's deceased mother's home in Venice. Soon La Draga, a mysterious, blind woman comes into their lives to nurse Fiammetta back to her original health & beauty.

After a long recuperation she sets out to be the highly desired Courtesan she had been back in Rome. But, clearly she has not recovered as she gets more businesslike & cold as the book advances. Her lovers & friends are well done 7 most have an impact on the general theme. The most interesting relationship in the book is between La Draga & Bucino. their relationship will eventually put Fiammetta into the background, while these two characters play out their dramatic fates. The only minor flaw is that it was a too long, had it been a bit shorter in reaching the end I would have given it 5 stars.
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38 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful book!, February 14, 2006
By 
With this, her second foray into historical fiction, Sarah Dunant gives her readers another brilliant novel.

Obviously well researched, Dunant's depiction of the Italian Renaissance setting is so realistic as to be magical. She transports the reader to 1527 and keeps them there. This fascinating novel is well fleshed out with historical figures and events.

The story is that of Fiametta, the titular courtesan and her dwarf companion, Bucino. They lose everything they hold dear, and barely escape with their lives when Rome is sacked and destroyed around them. Fiametta's legendary beauty was damaged in an encounter with "Lutheran harpies," and the two voyage to her matriarchal home in Venice to recover.

Sadly Fiametta"s mother has long since died and nothing remains of her fortune. With the help of La Draga, an eerily blind, crippled healer, Fiametta is nursed back to health and works hard to regain her status as the high-class companion to the wealthy and titled men of her time.

All is well until an accident involving Bucino sends him seeking after La Draga. To her misfortune, his discovery of her secret ends in an accusation of witchcraft and subsequent trial.

Dunant's Venice is truly compelling, shown to the reader by the unusually astute observer Bucino, narrator of this story. At times he is companion, helper, business manager, confidant and exotic plaything. He uses his status as a dwarf to full advantage. He is quite a sympathetic character; one can't help but like him for his loyalty to his mistress. He stands by her through thick and thin, even when there is considerable danger to his own skin. Indeed his loyalty makes him reject an offer that, had he accepted, would have set him up in luxury.

The courtesan Fiametta is both vain and shallow, excellent qualities in a woman who lives by her beauty. Under her flighty facade she has a core of steel, to have survived not only the rape of Rome, but also the setbacks that awaited her in the expected haven of Venice.

Although Fiametta is a slightly lesser character, her relationship with Bucino is the backbone of the story and the heart of the book; all events in some way revolve around her. La Draga the blind healer, has a terrible secret, this and her powers leave a permanent mark on the courtesan and her dwarf.

Armchair Interviews says: Dunant's characters are absolutely irresistible.







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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Refreshing and Enjoyable Romp into the World of Venice, Courtesans and Life, September 12, 2006
By 
Doug "dcb" (Holladay, Ut United States) - See all my reviews
Set in the 1500s in Venice, Dunant gives us a sometimes raunchy, sometimes touching and always realistic view of the world in this era. The book is written by the partner/manager of a gorgeous "courtesan" which I like to think of as more like a geisha than a prostitute, but make no mistake, our heroine is a high end prostitute and entertainer of rich men of the era. The partner is an extremely likable, insightful, resourcesful dwarf who is well aware of his position in life as a freak and sometimes entertainer and court jestor. I laughed out loud many times at his views and comments about himeself, other people's reactions to him as well as his general take on things that works today.

The partnership of the two works extremely well as they escape without much but their lives from Rome which is under siege and then move to Venice to carefully try to rebuild their whole business. Our courtesan has lost her hair and her confidence. With the help of a blind healer, they find their way back into business as usual and then the fun begins with the various and sundry wealthy clients, friends from the past, etc.

There is humor, there is wisdom about human sexuality, there is history and there is a great and touching story.
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30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well researched, and very interesting, January 21, 2006
By 
Sarra Borne (Grand Prairie, TX) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
With this, her second foray into historical fiction Sarah Dunant gives her readers another brilliantly written novel. Obviously well researched, Dunant's depiction of the Italian Renaissance setting is so realistic as to be magical. She transports the reader to 1527 and keeps them there for the duration.

The story is that of Fiametta, the titular courtesan and her dwarf companion, Bucino. They lose everything they hold dear, and barely escape with their lives when Rome is sacked and destroyed around them. Fiametta's legendary beauty was damaged in an encounter with "Lutheran harpies", and the two voyage to her matriarchal home in Venice to rest and recover. Sadly Fiametta's mother has long since died and almost nothing remains of her fortune. With the help of La Draga an eerily blind, crippled healer, Fiametta is nursed back to health and works hard to regain her status as the high-class companion to the wealthy and titled men of her time. All is well until an accident involving Bucino sends him seeking after La Draga. To her misfortune, his discovery of her secret ends in an accusation of witchcraft and subsequent trial.

Dunant's Venice is truly compelling, shown to the reader by the unusually astute observer Bucino, narrator of this story. At times he is companion, helper, business manager, confidant and exotic plaything. He uses his status as a dwarf to full advantage, even pretending to be a drooling idiot to further their cause. He is quite a sympathetic character; one can't help but like him for his loyalty to his mistress. He stands by her through thick and thin, even when there is considerable danger to his own skin. Indeed his loyalty makes him reject an offer that, had he accepted would have set him up in luxury. Only once does Fiametta push him to the breaking point. She falls in love with a young client, and starts giving him freely what Bucino as her pimp thinks should be paid.

The courtesan Fiametta is both vain and shallow, excellent qualities in a woman who lives by her beauty. Under her flighty facade she has a core of steel, to have survived not only the rape of Rome, but also the setbacks that awaited her in the expected haven of Venice. Although Fiametta is a slightly lesser character, her relationship with Bucino is the backbone of the story and the heart of the book; all events in some way revolve around her. La Draga the mysterious blind healer, has a terrible secret, this and her powers leave a permanent mark on the courtesan and her dwarf. Dunant's characters are absolutely irresistible.

This fascinating novel is well fleshed out with historical figures and events. Even La Draga herself is a real person, although some liberties are admittedly taken with her story. All in all, an exceptionally satisfying way to wile away an afternoon or two.
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61 of 73 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "What would you have me play with? How about our lives?", February 23, 2006


When Rome is overrun in 1597 by the armies of the Holy Roman Empire, the entire city is laid waste, the streets littered with the carnage of defeat, the victorious troops sating themselves on booty and blood. In one villa, the walls and cupboards stripped of the most valuable items and buried beneath the stench of the pigsty, a feast is prepared, a respite of welcome in the midst of chaos. A Roman courtesan, Fiammetta Bianchini, consort to cardinals, assuages the appetites of marauders to gain their protection, offering a welcome befitting a conquering army, with the aid of her invaluable companion, the dwarf Bucino. For a time, Fiammetta's ploy is successful, until the second wave of soldiers arrives, the Lutheran reformers who descend upon the villa. Stripped of everything but the clothes on their backs, Fiammetta's long, golden curls shorn to pulpy patches on her scalp, Fiammetta and Bucino take to the roads with a stream of refuges.

Fiammetta swallows her jewels, once prized from their settings, as future security, the pair returning to the land of the courtesan's birth, Venice, the great merchant city-state. Judiciously selling the gems, Fiammetta plans to reestablish herself, Bucino as her partner, relying on the salves of La Draga, a deformed blind healer Fiammetta has known since childhood, to restore the extensive damage to her body and spirit. In the course of her transformation, Fiammetta relies on La Draga's curatives, while Bucino familiarizes himself with the city and the characters who will so greatly affect their fortunes: a generous Turk, Abdulla Pashna, who offers to transport Bucino to his magical homeland; an accomplished artist who paints the beauties of Venice; Pietro Arentino, a writer from Rome attempting to mend former enmities and form a new alliance; the Jewish pawnbroker from the ghetto who buys the jewels and sets in motion the denouement of all Fiammetta and Bucino's carefully laid plans; and the anonymous but powerful faces of the officials who rule the city with an iron fist, engaging in commerce while protecting the illusion of virtue and godliness.

Set in the 16th century Venice of privilege and poverty, the intricacies of survival are shown through Bucino's eyes, he of small stature who relies on his instincts, urging Fiammetta's recovery only to see her fall victim to the courtesan's greatest enemy, that which she cannot have. It is Bucino who uncovers the ultimate betrayal that threatens to undo all their labors and return them to the streets, he who mulls the moral implications of a city steeped in sin while proclaiming virtue, he who must face his own great flaw, born of cynicism. This is historical fiction at its finest, the colorful characters playing on a stage of political machinations bred of prayer and power, men who indulge their senses with the excesses of wealth and the brokers who trade on their weaknesses: "Wherever there is public virtue there also is private vice."

Dunant's novel is multi-layered, delving beneath the historical and religious implications into the personal, her characters, particularly Bucino, voicing the human turmoil that attends both success and failure, his commitment to Fiammetta conflicting with his yearnings as a man in a deformed body, his spirit transformed and finally elevated in an intransigent relationship that brings him face to face with the dangers of emotions too long denied. Fiammetta and Bucino deal in a murky world of shifting values; it is no small thing to sell the body, and with it the betrayal of the soul. Dunant strips away the obvious, regardless how decadent or amusing, mining the more complex regions of the human heart, plumbing the invaluable bounty of compassion and hope. Luan Gaines/ 2006.


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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dunant's Books Deserve To Be On the Big Screen, September 19, 2006
In the Company of the Courtesean does not disappoint. Dunant's second novel is even richer and more decadent than The Birth of Venus.
Is it an historically accurate account of Renaissance Italy? Who cares? This is a tale of triumphs and tragedies of the human spirit and whatever small oversights there may be are easily forgiven.
Besides, how can you go wrong with a story about a dwarf and a prostitute who escape peril only to run straight into its arms again, rise to higher fame and redeem themselves in the end?

The story begins with a Roman courtesan, Fiammetta Bianchini, a famous flaming red-haired consort to the cardinals who finds herself fleeing for her life when Rome is invaded in 1597. With the aid of her companion, a dwarf named Bucino, the two escape to Venice with a belly full of jewels. They sell the gems and Fiametta rebuilds her life and fame despite her disfigurments. La Draga, a blind mysterious healer does more than transform her body, he transforms her spirit.

Venice is both decadent and dirty and offers a clash of classes as well as beauty galore. Fiamatta and Bucino find a fascinating array of new friends and new enemies as the city strains against the hypocricies of religion and politics.

Dunant's novel may be set in Italy during the early 1600s, but the universal themes of personal and political struggle continue today. Fiametta's journey from wealth and decadence to deformity and struggle only to lead to her betrayal at her most vulnerable moment creates an engaging read.

Bucino's loyal friendship endears the reader to this fine character we can all cheer for. He reminds me of Jiminy Cricket and Quasimodo all in one and is a delight for his heroism and his own heartaches creating just as much of a character arc and growth as Fiametta. The entire novel is studded with interesting, well-developed characters, which is a rare gift in today's literature.

Dunant has achieved greatness in portraying such a richly layered story with complex characters and a thematic, timeless backdrop readers can relate to today.



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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Diluted Sexuality in the Company of the Courtesan?, July 24, 2007
By 
A.Angelo (Philadelphia, PA) - See all my reviews
Dunant is a brilliant and poetic writer, which makes the book well worth the read. However, I agree with other reviewers that, for a book about sexuality and intrigue, it certainly lacks passion. While "The Birth of Venus" was provocative, this book was disappointingly tame. The most beautifully written passages of the book concern Bucino's thoughts and memories, and he also happens to be the only intriguing character. Fiammetta, who was supposedly so charming, certainly failed to impress. Only in the first chapter was she as mesmerizing as the author wanted her to be. The ending was rather anticlimactic, abrupt, and unsatisfying. These criticisms aside, the book was still entertaining, yet not quite as memorable as "The Birth of Venus."
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Gutsy, Vulgar, but Extremely Enjoyable Read, February 12, 2007
For many years Sarah Dunant presented the late show. She is also the author of seven crime novels and creator of her famous sleuth, Hannah Wolfe.

I found this book much, much more enjoyable than I expected it to be, so it was a really pleasant surprise. This is in no way a slight on the writing capabilities of the author, who has proved her calibre with several previous offerings. The problem was that initially the subject matter of the book did not really appeal to me, but my mind was soon changed.

The book is about life in Renaissance Italy and begins with the sacking of the eternal city of Rome by the armies of the Holy Roman Emperor and the subsequent journey of the courtesan Fiammetta Bianchini and her dwarf companion Bucino, as they leave Rome with their stomachs full of the jewels they have swallowed and head for the city of Venice. How they manage to infiltrate themselves into Venetian society.

Together they make the ideal partnership. On the one hand the quick witted and intelligent Bucino, on the other his mistress Fiammetta, a beautiful woman, trained in the art of entertaining and satisfying men who have the money to support her.

This is a story of desire, deception, sin, loyalty, in fact everything that men and women bring out in one another, sometimes with heartbreaking and devastating consequences. Beautifully written, sometimes witty, sometimes sad, but always interesting.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A disappointment, March 28, 2006
By 
jolc "jolc" (Toronto, ON Canada) - See all my reviews
The book started out with much promise but Dunant could not sustain the momentum and halfway through the characters lose their appeal. Dunant's writing style is exquisite but a good book needs more than a way with words. It needs endearing characters and a captivating tale, and Dunant failed to deliver.
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In the Company of the Courtesan: A Novel (Random House Large Print)
In the Company of the Courtesan: A Novel (Random House Large Print) by Sarah Dunant (Hardcover - February 14, 2006)
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