|
A
comprehensive Venetian reading-list would run on for dozens of pages,
and would include a vast number of out-of-print titles. Most of
our recommendations are in print, and those that aren't shouldn't
be too difficult to track down. Wherever a book is in print, the
UK publisher is given first in each listing, followed by the publisher
in the US - unless the title is available in one country only, in
which case we have specified which country, or is published by the
same company in both territories, in which case only the publisher
is specified.
FICTION
Italo
Calvino , Invisible Cities (Minerva; Harcourt, Brace). Characteristically
subtle variations on the idea of the City, presented in the form
of tales told by Marco Polo to Kublai Khan. No explicit reference
to Venice until well past halfway, when Polo remarks -"Every
time I describe a city I am saying something about Venice."
James
Cowans , A Mapmaker's Dream (Sceptre; Warner). Engaging historical-philosophical
fantasy based on the creation of Fra Mauro's famous map of the world,
one of the great exhibits in the Libreria Sansoviniana.
Michael
Dibdin , Dead Lagoon (Faber; Vintage). Superior detective story
starring Venice-born Aurelio Zen, a cop entangled in the political
maze of 1990s Italy.
Ernest
Hemingway , Across the River and into the Trees (Arrow; Scribner).
Hemingway at his most square-jawed and most mannered: our hero fights
good, drinks good, loves good, and could shoot a duck out of the
skies from the hip at a range of half a mile. Target of one of the
funniest parodies ever written: E.B. White's Across the Street and
into the Grill - "'I love you," he said, "and we
are going to lunch together for the first and only time, and I love
you very much."'
E.T.A.
Hoffmann , Doge and Dogaressa (in Tales of Hoffmann , Penguin).
Fanciful reconstruction of events surrounding the treason of Marin
Falier, by one of the pivotal figures of German Romanticism. Lots
of passion and pathos, narrated at headlong pace.
Hugo
von Hofmannsthal , Andreas (Pushkin Press; Turtle Point Press).
The last novel by a writer nowadays best known for his collaborations
with the composer Richard Strauss. An interesting example of the
use of Venice as a metaphor for moral decay, it charts the corruption
of a naive Viennese aristocrat in the slippery city - or, rather,
it would have done, had Hofmannsthal finished it. As it is, most
of the text consists of notes, which makes it something of an esoteric
pleasure.
Henry
James , The Aspern Papers & The Wings of the Dove (both
Penguin). The first, a 100-page tale about a biographer's manipulative
attempts to get at the personal papers of a deceased writer, is
one of James's most tautly constructed longer stories. The latter,
one of the three vast and circumspect late novels, was likened to
caviar by Ezra Pound, and is likely to put you off James for life
if you come to it without acclimatizing yourself with the earlier
stuff.
Donna
Leon , Acqua Alta (Pan; Harper o/p). Liberally laced with an
insider's observations on daily life in Venice, this is the most
atmospheric of Leon's long sequence of highly competent Venice-set
detective novels.
Thomas
Mann , Death in Venice (Minerva; Penguin). Profound study of
the demands of art and the claims of the flesh, with the city itself
thematically significant rather than a mere exotic backdrop. Richer
than most stories five times its length and infinitely more complex
than Visconti's sentimentalizing film.
Ian
McEwan , The Comfort of Strangers (Vintage). A modern Gothic
yarn in which an ordinary young English couple fall foul of a sexually
ambiguous predator. Venice is never named as the locality, but is
evoked with some subtlety and menace.
Caryl
Phillips, The Nature of Blood (Faber; Vintage). Principally
set during the Holocaust, this exploration of persecution and alienation
interweaves the twentieth century with re-creations of sixteenth-century
Venetian society, particularly the Ghetto.
Marcel
Proust , Albertine Disparue . The Venetian interlude, occurring
in the penultimate novel of Proust's massive novel sequence, can
be sampled in isolation for its acute dissection of the sensory
experience of the city - but to get the most from it, you've got
to knuckle down and commit yourself to the preceding ten volumes
of A la Recherche . The best English translation is D.J. Enright's
revision of the pioneering Kilmartin/Scott-Moncrieff version, published
in six paperback volumes (Vintage; Modern Library).
William
Riviere , A Venetian Theory of Heaven (Sceptre in UK). Pleasant,
undemanding story of marital woes and emotional confusion, with
expertly evoked Venetian setting.
Frederick
Rolfe (Baron Corvo), The Desire and Pursuit of the Whole (Da
Capo, o/p). A transparent exercise in self-justification, much of
it taken up with venomous ridicule of the English community in Venice,
among whom Rolfe moved while writing the book in 1909. (Its libellous
streak kept it unpublished for 25 years.) Snobbish and incoherent,
redeemed by hilarious character-assassinations and gorgeous descriptive
passages. One of the few books by an Anglophone to be saturated
with a knowledge of the place. Unfortunately, the Da Capo paperback
is currently out of print, leaving a very expensive hardback as
the only one in the catalogue.
Arthur
Schnitzler , Casanova's Return to Venice (Pushkin Press in UK).
Something of a Schnitzler revival followed the release of Kubrick's
Eyes Wide Shut , which was adapted from a novella by this contemporary
and compatriot of Freud. This similarly short and intense book also
explores the dynamics of desire, but from the perspective of a desperate
man who is rapidly approaching the end of his life.
Michel
Tournier , Gemini (Johns Hopkins). Venice is just one of the
localities through which the identical twins Jean and Paul (known
to their parents as Jean-Paul) are taken in this amazingly inventive
exploration of the concept of twinship. It might be flashy in places,
yet Tournier throws away more ideas in the course of a novel than
most writers dream up in a lifetime.
Barry
Unsworth , Stone Virgin (Penguin; Norton). Yet another story
of the uncanny repetitions of history - this time an English expert
in stone conservation begins to suspect that his emotional entanglement
with a sculptor's wife is a recapitulation of a past liaison. The
gobbets of scholarly detail sit uncomfortably alongside the melodrama
of the plot.
Salley
Vickers , Miss Garnet's Angel (HarperCollins/Carroll & Graf).
Desiccated spinster (a Marxist as well, to make matters worse) is
awakened by Venice to the finer things in life - a somewhat hackneyed
tale, but Vickers has a sound knowledge of the city and its art,
and displays a light touch in her recreation of the place.
Jeanette
Winterson , The Passion (Vintage; Grove). Whimsical little tale
of the intertwined lives of a member of Napoleon's catering corps
and a female gondolier. Acclaimed as a masterpiece in some quarters
ART
AND ARCHITECTURE
James S. Ackerman , Palladio (Penguin; Viking). Concise introduction
to the life, works and cultural background of the Veneto's greatest
architect. Especially useful if you're visiting Vicenza or any of
the villas.
Svetlana
Alpers and Michael Baxandall , Tiepolo and the Pictorial Intelligence
(Yale). This brilliant book analyzes with exhilarating precision
the way in which Tiepolo perceived and re-created the world in his
paintings, and demolishes the notion that Tiepolo was merely a "decorative"
artist. Though they devote most space to the frescoes at Würzburg,
Alpers and Baxandall discuss many of the Tiepolo paintings in Venice
and the Veneto, and their revelatory readings will enrich any encounter
with his art. The reproductions maintain Yale's customary high standards.
Patricia
Fortini Brown , Venetian Narrative Painting in the Age of Carpaccio
(Yale). Rigorously researched study of a subject central to Venetian
culture yet often overlooked in more general accounts. Fresh reactions
to the works discussed are combined with a penetrating analysis
of the ways they reflect the ideals of the Republic at the time.
Worth every penny.
Richard
Goy , Venice: The City and its Architecture (Phaidon). Published
in 1997, this superb book instantly became the benchmark. Eschewing
the linear narrative adopted by previous writers on the city's architecture,
Goy goes for a multi-angled approach, devoting one part to the growth
of the city and its evolving technologies, another to its "nuclei"
(the Piazza, Arsenale, Ghetto and Rialto), and the last to its building
types (palazzi, churches, etc). The result is a book that does full
justice to the richness and density of the Venetian cityscape -
and the design and choice of pictures are exemplary.
Alastair
Grieve , Whistler's Venice (Yale). Bankrupted after his libel
action against Ruskin, Whistler took himself off to Venice to lick
his wounds. He ended up staying for a year, having been inspired
by the city to produce some of his finest work. Grieve's methodical
and deeply researched book - yet another beautifully produced Venetian
title from Yale - reproduces the fifty etchings and one hundred
pastels that Whistler created in that year, juxtaposing them with
photographs and other images of the locales in a way that elucidates
the artist's way of working, and builds up an absorbing portrait
of the city in the late nineteenth century.
Paul
Hills , Venetian Colour (Yale). Seductive colour has always
been seen as a pre-eminent characteristic of Venetian painting and
applied art, but this handsome book, subtitled "Marble, mosaic,
painting and glass 1250-1550", has some interesting angles
on a subject you might have thought had been exhausted long ago.
Hills discusses the production of dyes, pigments and works of art
in the context of the Republic's mercantile culture, relating aspects
of pictorial style to the social history of Venetian costume, for
example, and explaining how black came to be the most luxurious
of hues. First-class illustrations, as is usually the case with
this publisher.
Paul
Holberton , Palladio's Villas (John Murray). Excellent survey
of the architectural principles underlying Palladio's country houses,
and the social environment within which they were created.
Deborah
Howard , The Architectural History of Venice (o/p); Jacopo Sansovino:
Architecture and Patronage in Renaissance Venice (Yale); Venice
& the East (Yale). The former is a fine introduction to the
subject (and should soon be back in print), while the latter's analysis
of the environment within which Sansovino operated is of wider interest
than you might think. Howard's latest book, Venice & the East
, is a fascinating and characteristically rigorous examination of
the ways in which the fabric of the city was conditioned by the
close contact between Venice's merchants and the Islamic world in
the period 1100-1500. It's a truism that San Marco and the Palazzo
Ducale are hybrids of Western and Islamic styles, but this splendidly
illustrated study not only has illuminating things to say about
those two great monuments - it makes you look freshly at the texture
of the whole city.
Peter
Lauritzen and Alexander Zielcke , The Palaces of Venice (Laurence
King, o/p). Lauritzen knows Venice as intimately as anyone currently
writing. This is a rich blend of social and architectural history,
and Zielcke's photographs are outstanding.
Michael
Levey , Painting in Eighteenth Century Venice (Yale). On its
appearance in 1959 this book was the first detailed discussion of
its subject. Now in its third edition, it's still the most thorough
exposition of the art of Venice's last golden age, though it shows
its age in concentration on heroic personalities - Giambattista
Tiepolo in particular.
Ralph
Lieberman , Renaissance Architecture in Venice (Abbeville, o/p).
Lieberman illustrates the complex development of architecture in
fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Venice through a chronological
survey of key buildings, but annoyingly calls a halt at 1540. Authoritative
without being pedantic.
John
McAndrew , Venetian Architecture of the Early Renaissance (o/p).
Definitive study of its subject by one of the very few writers to
have studied Venice's buildings with anything like Ruskin's concentration.
A beautiful book, but expensive even second-hand.
Tom
Nichols , Tintoretto (Reaktion Books). Ever since Vasari wrote
his life of the artist, Tintoretto has been presented as an artist
who flouted all the conventions of Venetian painting. This in-depth
study overturns that somewhat romanticised notion, to reveal a figure
who was both a radical and a populist. By far the best monograph
on Tintoretto in English.
Filippo
Pedrocco and M.A. Chiara Moretto Wiel , Titian - The Complete
Paintings (Thames & Hudson). The text is worthy rather than
stimulating (there's a lot of discussion of technique, but little
social context), but every surviving picture in Titian's colossal
oeuvre is reproduced in colour, and the interpretations of individual
paintings are as sound as you'd expect from two of the world's leading
experts on the subject.
Terisio
Pignatti and Filippo Pedrocco , Giorgione (Rizzoli). Expensive
monograph on the most enigmatic of the great Venetian painters.
Not especially acute in its observations, but very thorough, very
nicely produced, and better than the other in-print titles devoted
to Giorgione.
Sarah
Quill , Ruskin's Venice: The Stones Revisited (Ashgate). Prefaced
by four brief but informative essays on Ruskin and Venice, the core
of this book is a judicious selection of short passages from The
Stones of Venice and other works by Ruskin, with excellent illustrations
for every excerpt. Most of the pictures are crisp colour photographs
of buildings and architectural details, but the book also includes
some of Ruskin's own watercolours and drawings.
David
Rosand , Painting in Sixteenth-Century Venice (Cambridge University
Press). Covers the century of Giorgione, Titian, Tintoretto and
Veronese as thoroughly as most readers will want; especially good
on the social networks and artistic conventions within which the
painters worked.
John
Ruskin , The Stones of Venice . Enchanting, enlightening and
infuriating in about equal measure, this is still the most stimulating
book written about Venice by a non-Venetian. Sadly, you'll have
to scour the second-hand bookshops to get hold of the full three-volume
edition, as the only editions in print are abridgements, the best
of which is published by Da Capo.
John
Steer , A Concise History of Venetian Painting (Thames &
Hudson). Whistle-stop tour of Venetian art from the fourteenth to
the eighteenth century. Skimpy and undemanding, but a useful aid
to sorting your thoughts out after the visual deluge of Venice's
churches and museums, and the plentiful pictures come in handy when
your memory needs a prod.
Anchise
Tempestini , Giovanni Bellini (Abbeville). Deeply knowledgeable
overview of the work of the first great Venetian Renaissance artist,
with copious full-colour plates. No other currently available book
does justice to him.
John
Unrau , Ruskin and St Mark's (o/p). Ruskin discarded around
600 pages of notes and drawings of San Marco when he came to prepare
the text of The Stones of Venice ; using this material, Unrau has
produced a book that is as illuminating about Ruskin as it is about
the building. A fine selection of watercolours, paintings and photographs
complements the text.
Ettore
Vio (ed.), St Mark's Basilica in Venice (Thames & Hudson).
Edited by the man who is the current proto of San Marco (ie the
person in overall charge of the building's conservation), this lusciously
illustrated paperback gives you an informative close-up tour of
the fabric and contents of Europe's most ornate cathedral, from
the carvings of the façade to the goldwork of the treasury.
HISTORY
Fernand Braudel , The Mediterranean in the Age of Philip II
(University of California). Vast, magisterial analysis of the economics
and politics of the Mediterranean in the second half of the sixteenth
century, with Venice rarely off the stage. Braudel's deployment of
masses of raw material (population statistics, contemporary chronicles,
trade documents) requires prolonged and unwavering attention.
Patricia
Fortini Brown , Venice and Antiquity (Yale). Subtitled "The
Venetian Sense of the Past", this fascinating book explores
a subject that strangely no-one has tackled in depth before - the
ways in which an imperialist city with no pre-Christian past went
about classicizing its self-image. Drawing on a vast range of cultural
artefacts, from the great monuments to private manuscripts and medals,
Brown adds a new dimension to the history of Venice between the
thirteenth and the sixteenth centuries, the city's Golden Age. It's
not easy going but the effort is worthwhile, and superlative pictures
go some way to leaven the text.
David
Chambers and Brian Pullen (eds.), Venice: A Documentary History,
1450-1630 (Blackwell, o/p). A fine anthology of contemporary chronicles
and documents, virtually none of which have previously been translated.
Invaluable for getting the feel of the city in its heyday.
Robert
Finlay , Politics in Renaissance Venice (o/p). Subverts a few
received ideas about the political tranquillity of La Serenissima,
and is laced with anecdotes about the squabbling, scheming aristocracy.
Though not the first book you'd read after your holiday, it explains
the mechanics of power in Venice with great clarity.
Christopher
Hibbert , Venice, The Biography of a City (Grafton, o/p; Norton,
o/p). The usual highly proficient Hibbert synthesis of a vast range
of secondary material. Very good on the changing social fabric of
the city, with more on twentieth-century Venice than most others.
Excellent illustrations too - but, bafflingly, it's currently out
of print on both sides of the Atlantic.
Frederic
C. Lane , Venice, A Maritime Republic (Johns Hopkins, o/p).
The most authoritative one-volume socio-economic history of the
city in English, based on decades of research. Excellent on the
infrastructure of the city, and on the changing texture of everyday
life. A rather more arduous read than John Julius Norwich's populist
history (see below), which is presumably why it's slipped out of
print.
Jan
Morris , The Venetian Empire: A Sea Voyage (Penguin). Anecdotal
survey of the Republic's Mediterranean empire, with excursions on
the evidence left behind. More a sketch than an attempt to give
the full picture, it bears the usual Morris stylistic imprint -
ie, a touch too rich for some tastes.
John
Julius Norwich , A History of Venice (Penguin; Vintage). Although
it's far more reliant on secondary sources than Lane, and nowhere
near as compendious - you won't learn much, for example, about Venice's
finances, which is a major omission in a history of the quintessential
mercantile city - this book is unbeatable for its grand narrative
sweep
A
VENETIAN MISCELLANY
Pietro Aretino , Selected Letters (Penguin, o/p). Edited
highlights from the voluminous correspondence of a man who could
be described as the world's first professional journalist. Recipients
include Titian, Michelangelo, Charles V, Francis I, the pope, the
doge, Cosimo de' Medici - virtually anybody who was anybody in sixteenth-century
Europe.
Helen
Barolini , Aldus and his Dream Book (Italica Press). The innovative
printer and typographer Aldus Manutius was a crucial figure in the
culture of Renaissance Europe, but for every thousand visitors to
Venice who have heard of Titian there's perhaps one who knows anything
of Aldus. This concise, elegant and scholarly study deserves to
rectify that situation, and is copiously illustrated with pages
from the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili , a recondite allegory that was
the most beautiful book Aldus - or anyone else for that matter -
ever published. The complete Hypnerotomachia is now available in
English from Thames & Hudson, in an edition that's in the same
format as the original and reproduces all 174 of its woodcuts; it's
a fine piece of publishing, but the lay reader is likely to find
the text somewhat abstruse.
Joseph
Brodsky , Watermark (Hamish Hamilton, o/p; Noonday). Musings
on the wonder of being in Venice and the wonder of being Joseph
Brodsky, Nobel laureate and friend of the great. Flashes of imagistic
brilliance vitiated by some primitive sexual politics.
Giacomo
Casanova , History of My Life (Johns Hopkins). For pace, candour
and wit, the insatiable seducer's autobiography ranks with the journals
of James Boswell, a contemporary of similar sexual and literary
stamina. The twelve-volume sequence (here handsomely repackaged
into six paperbacks) takes him right across Europe, from Madrid
to Moscow. His Venetian escapades are covered in volumes two and
three of Willard Trask's magnificent translation.
Roberta
Curiel and Bernard Dov Cooperman , The Ghetto Of Venice (Tauris
Parke, o/p). Prefaced by a concise history of the Jewish community
in Venice, the main part of this lavishly produced book is a synagogue-by-synagogue
tour of the ghetto.
Milton
Grundy , Venice: An Anthology Guide (De la Mare). A series of
itineraries of the city fleshed out with appropriate excerpts from
a huge range of travellers and scholars. Doesn't cover every major
sight in Venice, but the choice of quotations couldn't be bettered.
Henry
James , Italian Hours (Penguin). Urbane travel pieces from the
young Henry James, including five essays on Venice. Perceptive observations
on the paintings and architecture of the city, but mainly of interest
in its evocation of the tone of Venice in the 1860s and 70s.
Henry
James , Letters from the Palazzo Barbaro (Pushkin Press; Turtle
Point Press). Palazzo Barbaro was the home of the Curtis family,
whose circle of friends included not just Henry James (who was a
frequent guest in the house) but also John Singer Sargent, James
Whistler and Robert Browning. Consisting primarily of letters by
James (some of them previously unpublished), this engaging little
book also contains correspondence from the Curtis family, and creates
a vivid composite portrait of life among the city's expatriate American
community a hundred years ago.
Ian
Littlewood , Venice: A Literary Companion (Penguin; St Martin's
Press). Wide-ranging anthology of writings on the city, including
many pieces that will be unfamiliar to all but the most scholarly
devotees of Venice.
Giulio
Lorenzetti , Venice and its Lagoon (Lint). The most thorough
cultural guide ever written to any European city - Lorenzetti seems
to have researched the history of every brick and every canvas.
Though completely unmanageable as a guidebook (it even has an index
to the indexes), it's indispensable for all those besotted with
the place. Almost impossible to find outside Venice, but every bookshop
in the city sells it.
Mary
McCarthy , Venice Observed (Penguin; Harcourt, Brace). Originally
written for the New Yorker ; McCarthy's clear-eyed and brisk report
is a refreshing antidote to the gushing enthusiasm of most first-hand
accounts from foreigners in Venice. The UK Penguin edition combines
it with her equally entertaining The Stones of Florence .
James
Morris , Venice (Faber; published in the US as Jan Morris's
The World of Venice , Harcourt, Brace). To some people this is the
most brilliant book ever written about Venice; to others it's revoltingly
fey and self-regarding. But if you can't stomach the style, Morris's
knowledge of Venice's folklore provides some compensation.
Tim
Parks , Italian Neighbours (Vintage; Fawcett). One of the more
worthwhile additions to the genre defined by AYear in Provence ,
Parks's book is a sharp and engaging account of ex-pat life in a
village near Verona.
John
Pemble , Venice Rediscovered (Oxford University Press). This
is one of the most engrossing academic studies of the city to have
appeared in recent years, concentrating on the ever-changing perceptions
of Venice as a cultural icon since it ceased to exist as a political
power. An eloquent writer, totally uninfected by the preciousness
that overcomes so many writers on Venice, Pemble unearths stories
missing from all other histories.
Dorothea
Ritter , Venice in Old Photographs 1841-1920 (Laurence King,
o/p; Little, Brown, o/p). A well-researched and beautifully presented
book, packed with rare images of Venice spanning the years from
the birth of photography to the birth of mass tourism. The cityscapes
have barely altered, but the scenes of everyday Venetian life come
from another world.
A.J.A.
Symons , The Quest for Corvo (Quartet; Ecco, o/p). Misanthropic,
devious and solitary, Frederick Rolfe was a tricky subject for a
biographer to tackle, and Symons' book, subtitled An Experiment
in Biography , makes the difficult process of writing Rolfe's life
the focus of its narrative. An engrossing piece of literary detective
work, and a perfect introduction to Rolfe's Venetian novel, The
Desire and Pursuit of the Whole .
Stefan
Zweig , Casanova: A Study in Self-Portraiture (Pushkin Press;
Turtle Point Press). A fascinating study of Casanova's life and
autobiography, offering a persuasive analysis that differs strikingly
from the clichéd image of Casanova as a real-life Don Juan
- in fact, Zweig presents him as the very antithesis of Don Juan
the misogynistic seducer. Though brief, this is the best book on
its subject.
|