From Publishers Weekly
By the end of the 19th century, Venice-conquered by Napoleon, handed over to the Austrians, plundered by the departing French troops, ruled by the Hapsburgs, and plundered again by the Austrians when they left in the 1860s-had lost much of its former glory. Nevertheless, Venice continued to fascinate travelers, and in this gracefully written book, Norwich (A History of Venice) attempts to portray the city through the eyes of some of its famous visitors of the period. Except for passages drawn from the writings of these travelers, this approach is not entirely successful, particularly in the chapter on Lord Byron, which is mainly concerned with the poet's love affairs. Similarly, the section on Robert Browning has more to do with his enthusiasm for his son's restoration of one of the palaces on the Grand Canal than with Browning's impressions of the city. On the other hand, in the chapter on John Ruskin, who recorded the decaying city in drawings, watercolors and writings, readers get some telling descriptions, and a sense of Venetian atmosphere and everyday life comes across in Norwich's accounts of the paintings of James McNeill Whistler and John Singer Sargent. Perhaps the most compelling chapter is the one on the eccentric, penniless and misanthropic British novelist Frederick Rolfe (Baron Corvo), who, because he alienated everyone who tried to help him, was homeless during much of the time he lived in Venice. For the most part, the book, though intriguing, reveals more about the lives and personalities of the visitors than about Venice itself. Illus. not seen by PW.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
The prolific Norwich is the author of the distinguished two-volume
History of Venice (1982). In the introduction to his new book, he rightly poses the question, Why write another book on the subject? The answer: to bring the tale of Venice forward from where he left it--upon the fall of the 1,000-year-old Venetian Republic at the hands of Napoleon. So, that leads Norwich to pose another question for himself: "Venice in the nineteenth century was a poor, sad shadow of what she had been in the eighteenth; how, then, could the story of that century best be told?" His perfect solution is to see Venice through the eyes of famous visitors who spent time there in the nineteenth century, beginning with the history-altering Napoleon himself ("The city's enduring beauty seems to have been lost on him"). Other of these nineteenth-century visitor/observer/temporary residents include art critic John Ruskin (for whom Venice was "the paradise of cities"), writer Henry James ("The city . . . might be said to have completed his cultural education"), and painter John Singer Sargent (who "became essentially a Venetian"). Rendered in a stylish, resonant, indelible prose quite befitting the subject, this book becomes, despite what we learn about Napoleon's marked aversion, an ode to a very splendid and unique city; for, as Norwich posits, "there are surely worse fates than to die, if die we must, in a glorious Venetian palazzo, looking out onto the Grand Canal."
Brad HooperCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.