Death at La Fenice

Death at La Fenice (1992), the first novel by American academic and crime-writer Donna Leon, is the first of the internationally best-selling Commissario Brunetti mystery series, set in Venice, Italy. The novel won the Japanese Suntory prize,[1] and its sequel is Death in a Strange Country (1993).

Death at La Fenice
1st US edition
AuthorDonna Leon
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesGuido Brunetti, #1
Genrecrime fiction, mystery
PublisherHarperCollins (US)
Arrow (UK)
Publication date
1992
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN0-09-946936-7
OCLC53820887
Followed byDeath in a Strange Country 

Plot

A world-famous German opera conductor has died at La Fenice, and Commissario (Detective) Guido Brunetti pursues what appears to be a murder investigation without leads.

Inspiration

Leon, who completed a doctorate in Indiana, specialising in 18th-century novelists, is an ex-pat American who lives in Venice. A friend of Leon's, a famous conductor, "suggested she try a crime novel. She wrote Death at la Fenice as a joke. When she finished the book she stashed it away and forgot about it until submitting it for the Suntory prize in Japan. Somewhat to her consternation, it won and she was offered a two-book contract by Harper Collins. This meant, among other things, that she was compelled to write a sequel. 'I lucked out,' she says."[1]

gollark: They wouldn't be happy to have them be thingied with magnets either. This is irrelevant.
gollark: Do racks have wheels? If so, just cut the power (and UPSes) and drag them out.
gollark: But then you're damaging precious GPUs. You should steal them.
gollark: Cryptomining farms probably boot off SSDs and don't have much more storage than that, in any case.
gollark: You can't actually do anything very bad to recent computers just by waving weak magnets around. I don't know if you *have* been able to ever since magnetic tapes stopped being a popular thing.

References

See also


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