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Palladian Days: Finding a New Life in a Venetian Country House
 
 
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Palladian Days: Finding a New Life in a Venetian Country House [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Sally Gable (Author), Carl I. Gable (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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This Book Is Bound with "Deckle Edge" Paper
You may have noticed that some of our books are identified as "deckle edge" in the title. Deckle edge books are bound with pages that are made to resemble handmade paper by applying a frayed texture to the edges. Deckle edge is an ornamental feature designed to set certain titles apart from books with machine-cut pages. See a larger image.

Book Description

June 21, 2005
What Sally Gable thought she wanted was a summer house in New Hampshire. What she found and learned to love was a new life in a beautiful and celebrated Palladian villa in the countryside outside Venice. In Palladian Days, she takes us with her on a journey of discovery and transformation as she and her husband, Carl, become the bemused owners of Villa Cornaro, built in 1552 by the great Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio called by Town & Country one of the ten most influential buildings in the world.

Sally Gable writes lovingly of the villa as she and Carl settle in and slowly uncover its history, the lives of its former inhabitants, and its architectural pleasures. She tells of her early days there, learning to speak Italian with the help of her engaging new neighbors in the tiny town that surrounds the villa, Piombino Dese, a place both traditional and busily modern with its old-fashioned street markets and its burgeoning economy.

She writes with beguiling humor about learning to take care of a Renaissance palace with its 104 frescoes and 44 pairs of shutters (all of which have to be opened and closed daily). She tells of baffling encounters with the soprintendente di belle arti, who must give permission for even the smallest repair to the Italian national treasure Sally and Carl call home. And she describes the life she and her husband create for the villa itself, allowing it to be used for concerts, ballet performances, even as a movie set.

In Palladian Days, we enter with Sally and Carl into their engrossing adventure, following along as they are woven ever more deeply into the fabric of small-town Italy and into its larger national history. Their story will delight travelers and would-be travelers; all who are fascinated by architecture, by art, by the powerful essence of place—and, especially, house-dreamers everywhere.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Eighteen of the innovative 16th-century villas by Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio survive today in Italy's Veneto region, and one of them, Villa Cornaro, made it onto Town & Country's list of the world's 10 most important buildings. The sixth family to occupy this country house during its 450-year history, the Gables reside there for half the year (she's on the boards of various educational and musical organizations; he's a lawyer and author of a book on Venetian glass). Sally Gable portrays the villa, the people who live in the surrounding countryside and their fading traditions, which "may be in their last generation." In fluid prose, she recalls the 1987–1988 negotiations that led to the couple's purchase, the previous inhabitants and her research into the history of the palatial house, its 104 frescoes and Palladio himself. Surmounting swarming bees and the usual maintenance problems, the Gables brought grandeur back to the villa, eventually receiving house guests and film crews, hosting dinner parties and staging cultural events. This delightful mix of memoir, travel guide and recipes is, in essence, a twist on these well-worn genres—a very chic, expensive twist at that. Photos. Agent, Kitty Benedict. (July 1)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

An Atlanta couple sets out to buy a second home in New Hampshire and ends up with a villa in the Veneto. Not just any old villa, this is a genuine architectural monument designed by none other than Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio. The columned marvel set down among formal gardens appealed to the Gables as a near-perfect representation of everything they loved about northern Italy. Laden with 104 frescoes, Villa Cornaro needs some updating to make it habitable for twenty-first-century residents, so the Gables go about marshaling the aid of local residents and learning Venetan, the local dialect some distance removed from standard Italian. Having recently banded together to save the villa from turning into a sports palace, local farmers won government backing to preserve the monument and are initially suspicious of the new American owners. Intractable problems lead the villa's owners to a sense of resignation and acceptance of what can't be changed and a deeper appreciation of the beauty that the villa and its gardens offer as a frame for living. Mark Knoblauch
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; First Edition edition (June 21, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400043379
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400043378
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 1 x 8.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,063,028 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A special treat for home renovators, June 28, 2005
This review is from: Palladian Days: Finding a New Life in a Venetian Country House (Hardcover)
As an old house renovator, I found much to love about this story of an American couple who buys a 450-year-old Italian villa for their summer home. They face many of the same issues all old house owners do - how do you modernize, how do you repair without compromising the historic integrity of the structure?

This book has elements for fans of travel, Italy, art, architecture, history and home renovation. While I'm normally not a fan of nonfiction, I wasn't bored for a moment by this fascinating book. The portrait they paint of Italian life and the amazing historic villa make me want to book a flight and go there right now.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Julia Rush compliments the Gables and enjoyed the book, November 17, 2005
This review is from: Palladian Days: Finding a New Life in a Venetian Country House (Hardcover)
Review of "Palladian Days" by Julia Rush.
As former owners of the Villa Cornaro - which Sally and Carl write about so enthusiastically, interestingly, and in detail in their new book "Palladian Days" concerning among other things, the problems which arose during their ownership, we are pleased to see how well they have managed.. They have handled problems well (roof and back balcony and scorpions, etc.) and we chose them among the several prospective buyers because we knew that they would be able to handle any emergency that arose and that they would fit into the town and had the necessary funds and would obtain the knowledge necessary to do maintenance and repairs properly. They have been more perfect than we could expect - and in the sixteen years (since 1989) that they have owned the Villa they have maintained it perfectly, done repairs and restorations as needed, opened the Villa to the public, and all of the town loves them and appreciates what they do and their friendly attitude. Sally took the trouble to learn Italian immediately, and this got her off to a good start. Carl has, I believe, lectured on the Villa Cornaro (as Richard had also done for twenty years while he owned it) and Palladio and the influence of the great architect, and they have a marvelous web page - with an amazing amount of history of the Villa including pictures, and other major Villas by Palladio and the Cornaro family. Carl has also written a very good book on Murano Glass. Sally and Carl's research on the Cornaro family, the Villa Cornaro and Palladio and other villas and beautiful Venice (which comes out in the book as well as the web pages) amazes me and we are quite proud of them for it.
My husband, Richard Rush, purchased the Villa Cornaro from the Italian government (L'Ente per le Ville Venete) in 1969, after a year of negotiation and with letters of recommendation from several of our friends, "The Richest American", the late J. Paul Getty, who was restoring a villa near Rome, and Richard's friend, the Secretary of Commerce, C. R. Smith, and Count Giorgio Geddes de Filcaia, whose family owned a 250 room palace near Florence and who was a friend of Richard's for some years because of his interest in automobiles - especially Ferrari. He translated our proposal, and it was perhaps because of him we became interested in living in Italy, although we had been collecting Italian art and antiques for a number of years, had written in the field and my favorite city is Venice..
The Villa which had been used as a school for young children and was purchased by the Italian government(L'Ente Per Le Ville Venete) to keep it from further damage, was in need of restoration - of all new electric wiring, all new plumbing, new baths, new kitchen equipment, and the glass in the leaded glass windows was broken, the metalwork on gates needed restoration, the gardens were over-run, there were posters pasted on the front garden wall, there was a door put where it shouldn't be and no doors where there should be on porches and stairways.
There was much to be done and there was a great deal of dust and dirt. There was also no furniture or lighting fixtures. We were able, fortunately, to restore the Villa and bring it back to its former beauty over a period of twenty years and to furnish it with fine Italian antiques, chairs, tables, armadios, etc.,including some beautiful Venetian chandeliers, and a painting of Saint Anthony of Padua. Some fine antique pieces were stolen (in four break-ins) but we put in less valuable but suitable antiques and an alarm system - and kept adding.
Living in the villa was to me a great and joyful experience and I can relive many things as I read Sally's new book ...from her visits to the nearby towns, and Florence and Rome, to the Saturday market, to each room of the Villa and every store, shop, and family on Via Roma.
I highly recommend the book for those who love Venice and Italy and Palladio, and would like to experience this along with Sally and Carl. Sally even gets great recipes from dear friends of mine (now hers) and shares them with her readers. As she notes in the book, I am not a great cook, but Richard and I loved being invited to the homes of our neighbors and enjoying Silvana Miolo's cooking at the little Caffe Palladio across the street from the Villa. When we entertained at the Villa, Silvana and her family would serve the dinner (or party dishes when we had a reception,) in the great hall or dining room of the Villa.
When we returned to Piombino Dese for the wedding of Wilma Scquizzato and Paolo Melchiori (Wilma is the daughter of our dear friends, Memi and Francesca Scquizzato), Sally Gable met us, with Francesca Scquizzato (whose granddaughter is named for me) and Maria Rosa Pancolini, (whose son is named for Richard), at the Venice airport and invited us to stay at the Villa. Sally gave us a prosecco party, and asked Silvana to prepare a dinner for us which was served in the beautiful formal dining room with the Noah frescoes. The Villa looked beautiful. The antiques were all there - and most were as we had placed them - and she had created a new kitchen which is magnificent (mine had been very simple) and also she was able to purchase Oriental carpets for the Villa - which are very suitable. She also created a family room upstairs, with comfortable furniture, and added a tub to the downstairs bath, which I wish we had thought of. We were distressed to hear of the trouble with scorpions, and the later roof problems and porch problem as we thought everything was perfect, but we knew that the Gables would be able to handle whatever emergency arose - and they did! They also have children who love the Villa.
Do enjoy the book, "Palladian Days" and relive the life in a Palladian villa that she and Carl (and Richard and I) have lived and enjoyed. It is magical. Not a day goes by that I don't think of the Villa and the town and Italy.
And do visit the Villa yourself if you are in Venice - or Padua or en route to Bassano - as it is not far away and is open on Saturday afternoons, May - September, or by appointment to a group of ten or more throughout the year. Or, perhaps, you visited a number of years ago when we were there.
Auguri e saluti!
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Perfect for Italian history and achitecture enthusiasts, August 2, 2005
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Palladian Days: Finding a New Life in a Venetian Country House (Hardcover)
If home ownership is the American dream, dual home ownership is beyond the wildest dreams of most Americans. A second home --- in the mountains, by the lake, on the beach --- is the ultimate luxury. Or is it? What if your second home is a famous, historic, important palazzo in a small town in Italy, just twenty miles from Venice? Now that sounds like a dream come true.

A piece of Italian history is not what Sally Gable set out to buy. She was thinking more along the lines of a summer home in New England, a place for family and friends to gather away from their busy lives in Atlanta. But a New York Times real estate ad caught her eye, and before she knew it she and her husband Carl were walking up the steps to the impressive 425-year-old Villa Cornaro in Piombino Dese, Italy. It seems Villa Cornaro was destined to be theirs.

In PALLADIAN DAYS Sally Gable shares the joys and frustrations of owning a home considered one of the ten most influential buildings in the world. And, as one can imagine, the joys are numerous and the frustrations plenty. PALLADIAN DAYS recounts the purchase of the villa in the late 1980s and discusses the history of the home and its complicated upkeep, as well as life for Sally in Piombino Dese.

The price of purchasing Villa Cornaro (never revealed in the book) was only the first obstacle for the Gables. After they financed the purchase they learned that the Italian government still had a chance to deny them the right to own it. Once the property was legally theirs, the real work started and the hidden costs became obvious. The house did not have a modern operational kitchen, there was no heat, it had tricky electrical wiring, and it was infested with scorpions. Plus, it was hard to find a competent gardener. But the tenacious Gable worked hard to make Villa Cornaro a livable home while preserving its historical integrity. She made friends in Piombino Dese and found many in her community who could help her care for the house.

Why such fuss for a big old house? Villa Cornaro was designed by the important Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio, whose work is still influential and copied today. The Gables are only the sixth family since its construction in 1552 to reside in Villa Cornaro, which is named for the Cornaros, one of the most powerful families in Italian history. PALLADIAN DAYS, although short and not a scholarly work, is full of information about the house, Andrea Palladio, and the Cornaro family.

Gable also writes about adjusting to life in her new surroundings, cultural differences and language barriers, and even shares her favorite Italian recipes. She seems to want to focus on the question of why she felt so drawn to devote her energy and resources to Villa Cornaro and spends some time in the beginning of the book on this theme, but she never really reaches any conclusion and the idea fades as the story continues.

While PALLADIAN DAYS is interesting and well-written, it may not appeal to everyone. Those interested in Italian architecture and/or history probably will appreciate this book the most. Gable seems generally humble and appreciative of her good fortune, but it may be off-putting for some to read about living in such circumstances (Gable never discloses dollar amounts for the upkeep of the house, although she and her husband do rent it out for artistic performances, movie filming, tours and the like in order to help pay to maintain it). Others, however, will be swept up in Sally Gable's dream come true.

--- Reviewed by Sarah Rachel Egelman
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