Īccording to Kirkus Reviews, "Berendt does great justice to an exalted city that has rightly fascinated the likes of Henry James, Robert Browning, and many filmmakers throughout the world. Upon this book's release on September 27, 2005, it entered 's Top Ten Bestsellers list and was number one on the New York Times Best Seller list. The book also tells the story of many American and English expatriates who went to live in Venice, from Daniel Curtis, who owned Palazzo Barbaro where Henry James and John Singer Sargent were guests, to the poet Ezra Pound, who lived the last part of his life in Venice with his long-time mistress Olga Rudge. Soon afterwards he created glassworks dedicated to the memory of the fire, in his own rendition of how the opera house burned. It is a compelling look at an otherwise inaccessible community of people who inhabit one of the worlds most beautiful cities, a city steeped in art, history. Seguso lived directly behind La Fenice and witnessed the fire. The opera house burned again while the second renovation was ongoing.Īmong those interviewed is Archimede Seguso, a renowned Venetian glassblower of the twentieth century. The book explores local reactions to the fire, from the American "Save Venice" Foundation to Venice's bureaucratic government. The book tells the story of some interesting inhabitants of Venice, Italy, whom the author met while living there in the months following a fire which destroyed the historic La Fenice opera house in 1996. The City of Falling Angels (2005) is a non-fiction work by John Berendt.
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