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Executive Times |
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2005 Book Reviews |
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The City
of Falling Angels by John Berendt |
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Rating: ••• (Recommended) |
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Click on
title or picture to buy from amazon.com |
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Personality John Berendt’s new book about Here’s
an excerpt, from the end of Chapter 2, pp. 40-47: The meeting was opened by
the general manager of the Fenice, Gianfranco Pontel, who wept and swore he would not sleep soundly
again until the Fenice was rebuilt and back in
operation. Pontel, a political appointee with no
musical background, said he saw no reason to resign, as several people had
publicly demanded he do. Following Pontel, one official after another came forward to bewail
the fate of the Fenice, pray for its resurrection,
and absolve himself of any blame. As they spoke,
high above them on the coffered ceiling, legions of tormented souls
languished in Palma Giovane’s Cycles of Purgatory, in silent mockery of their every word. Mayor Cacciari,
his black hair tousled, came to the microphone. The day after the fire, he
had announced that the city would rebuild the Fenice
within two years and that it would be rebuilt just as it was before, rather
than as a modern theater. He revived the old slogan Corn ‘era, dov’era (As it was, where it
was), first invoked in the campaign to build an exact replica of the Bell
Tower in St. Mark’s Square, the Campanile, after it collapsed in 1902. The
city council quickly ratified Cacciari’s decision. Today the mayor repeated
his promise. He was forthright about the rationalizations that kept running
through his mind. “Afterward you invent ten thousand excuses,” he said. “You
tell yourself, ‘You can’t simultaneously be the custodian of the Fenice, the police, the public utilities, the fire
department. You cannot be expected to keep watch over the city house by
house, church by church, museum by museum.’ You can say all these things to
yourself, but you keep thinking, ‘No, it’s not possible, this cannot happen. No,
it didn’t happen. The Fenice cannot burn Though the audience was
clearly unhappy, the august setting of the Ateneo
Veneto served to enforce a measure of civility, if not quite the usual
pin-drop silence. The assemblage gave voice to its general disgruntlement by
maintaining a constant murmur that rose and fell in response to the remarks
of the speaker. There came a point, however, when actual words leaped out of
the undertone, distinctly audible words, angry words, sharply spoken and
coming from among the standees on the left side of the hall. “When we elected you,”
the voice called out to Cacciari, “we gave you the
most beautiful theater in the world, intact!
And you have given it back to us in ashes!” The voice belonged to the
painter Ludovico De Luigi, freshly returned from Members of the audience
craned their necks in half-embarrassed expectation. Would this outburst turn
into one of Ludovico’s happenings? Were his nude
models waiting in the wings? Would he haul Out another version of his bronze
viola sculpture, the one with a large phallus protruding from it? Would he
let rats out of a cage as he had once done in St. Mark’s Square? Apparently
not. De Luigi had not had time to bring anything to this meeting but himself. Mayor Cacciari
looked wearily at him. “ “But that’s why we
elected you,” said De Luigi. “We put you in charge, whether you accept that
or not! And you!” he bellowed, now pointing his finger at the startled
general manager, Pontel. “For God’s sake, stop that
sniveling! You’re like a baby whose toys have been taken away. Do the
honorable thing. Resign!” Satisfied that he had
made his point, De Luigi subsided, and a superintendent stepped forward to
say that the task of rebuilding the Fenice would
help revive old crafts that no longer existed in The woman by the door
nudged her friend. “What did I tell you? There are no accidents.” The last to speak was a
vice mayor. “ The audience filed back
out into the sunlight of Campo San Fantin, where
the two cigarette-smoking policemen were now engaged in banter with a trio
of pretty young girls. They were explaining that they would love to take the
girls into the theater for a peek at the wreckage, but it had been sealed by
the police, and nobody could go in. Ludovico De
Luigi’s voice rang out as he headed away in the company of friends. “I rneant to insult them! Let them be angry.”
He gestured at the Fenice as he passed it. “ The death of But by the eighteenth
century, “I will be an Attila for
the Venetian state!” Napoleon had thunderedin
Italian so as not to be misunderstood. He proved good to his word. His men
looted the Venetian treasury, demolished scores of buildings, pulled precious
stones from their settings, melted down objects of gold and silver, and
carted off major paintings for installation in the Louvre
and the The fallen I understood why so many
stories set in In the soul-searching
aftermath of the Fenice fire, VenetianS
seemed to be asking themselves the very questions that I, too, had been
wondering about—namely, what it meant to live in so rarefied and unnatural a
setting. Was there anything left of the This much I knew: The
population of Because of its two
centuries of poverty, the city’s architectural heritage was still remarkably
free of modern intrusions. The nineteenth and twentieth centuries had left
barely any mark on it at all. Walking through Within days of my
arrival, I began to consider the idea of extending my stay and living in I decided I would live in
an apartment, not a hotel. I would walk around the city with a notebook and,
on occasion, a small tape recorder. I would have no fixed agenda, but I would
look more at the people who lived in In preparation for this
undertaking, I reread the classic texts. They were not at all
encouraging. Mary McCarthy put it bluntly in I’7enice Observed: “Nothing can be said [about
These declarations were not as
forbidding as they seemed. Mary McCarthy was referring mainly to clichéd
observations about My interest, in any case, was not Why Because, to my mind, Because, despite its miles of tangled
streets and canals, Because I could not imagine a more
enticing beat to assign myself for an indefinite period of time. And because, if the worst-case scenario
for the rising sea level were to be believed, For all the
reasons Berendt had for writing this book, there
are multiple more reasons why readers will enjoy The City
of Falling Angels. The title is referred to on page 294: “After part of a
marble angel fell from a parapet of the ornate but sadly dilapidated Steve Hopkins,
November 21, 2005 |
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ã 2005 Hopkins and Company, LLC The recommendation rating for
this book appeared in the December 2005
issue of Executive Times URL for this review: http://www.hopkinsandcompany.com/Books/The
City of Falling Angels.htm For Reprint Permission,
Contact: Hopkins & Company, LLC • E-mail: books@hopkinsandcompany.com |
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