
Unto Us a Son Is Given
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Narrated by:
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David Sibley
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By:
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Donna Leon
About this listen
Random House presents the audiobook edition of Unto Us a Son Is Given written by Donna Leon, read by David Sibley.
SHORTLISTED FOR THE GOLD DAGGER AWARD
The latest bestselling Venice crime novel from celebrated author Donna Leon
As a favour to his wealthy father-in-law, the Count Falier, Commissario Guido Brunetti agrees to investigate the seemingly innocent wish of the Count’s best friend, the elderly and childless Gonzalo, to adopt a younger man as his son. Under Italian inheritance laws, this man would become the sole heir to Gonzalo’s substantial fortune, something which Gonzalo’s friends, including the Count, find appalling. For his part, Brunetti wonders why they're so intent on meddling in the old man's business.
Not long after Brunetti meets with Gonzalo, the elderly man unexpectedly passes away from natural causes. Old and frail, Gonzalo’s death goes unquestioned, and a few of his oldest friends gather in Venice to plan the memorial service.
But when Berta, a striking woman and one of Gonzalo’s closest confidantes, is strangled in her hotel room, Brunetti is drawn into long-buried secrets from Gonzalo’s past. What did Berta know? And who would go to such lengths to ensure it would remain hidden?
Once again, Donna Leon brilliantly follows the twists and turns of the human condition, set against the ebb and flow of Venetian life.
Superb!
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Οkay-ish
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Another 5* Donna Leon
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Over the last five or so books however, I have become almost as bored with the plots as I suspect Donna Leon has. Instead of getting into the complexities of Brunetti's mind to understand how he solves the crimes, we are subjected to endless musings on irrelevant tangents (I could never work out what the fate of the women of Troy had to do with anything or the relevance of the altercation between Patta's wife and the neighbours' son). I sometimes wonder whether these are not actually pages from Leon's other writings, accidentally included in the manuscript!
Long gone are Vianello's clever wife, tantalising glimpses into Elletra's mysterious private life, Alvise's development into a good policeman. Following their stories pulled me in to the world of Venetian crime with Brunetti's inner world at its center.
I have kept reading and listening to new books in the hope that they might return but sadly, like them, I just no longer care enough. Rather, I will trust that Guido and Paola will retire to the country villa with trunks of Greek tragedies for him and Henry James for her, to grow old contentedly with good wine and perfectly cooked pasta.
Ciao, Guido.
Not what they used to be
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Fabulous Read
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Not the best Brunelli book
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Excellent on all fronts
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A disappointing Donna Leon
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About friendships
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What I love about Brunetti
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