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Vanilla Beans and Brodo: Real Life in the Hills of Tuscany

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Libro usado en buenas condiciones, por su antiguedad podria contener señales normales de uso

Paperback

First published March 26, 2001

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Isabella Dusi

5 books4 followers

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5 stars
57 (19%)
4 stars
100 (34%)
3 stars
86 (29%)
2 stars
35 (12%)
1 star
13 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Shauna.
60 reviews5 followers
December 23, 2013
I thought the book looked wonderful, had a lovely idea to it and being a fan of travel & italy ws excited to start this.
however, I am sad to say that for me the start was so dry, plunging into the history of the place with no mention of the couple who are choosing to live there that I ended up battling to page 50 & giving up. I wasnt after a history lesson on ancient italy, I wanted to hear about the couples experiences whilst getting settled in and it took too long to get started for me.
Profile Image for Kristin.
14 reviews1 follower
December 13, 2007
I liked the setting of this memoir about an expatriot living in a Tuscan hilltown. Yet the writing was often awkward. I constantly felt like editing it to polish and improve the flow. There are great details and images, yet it's sometimes difficult to digest. I'm glad I read it though.
Profile Image for Jill Rockwell.
55 reviews1 follower
January 10, 2017
I have wandered through many small Tuscan towns and thought that there was not much activity. Dusi's book goes so much deeper than what the temporary visitor can imagine from looking, and gives glimpses about what makes up the network of a truly established historical place. I loved her silent musings about the people she came to know, and her transformation into a proud member of her quartiere. I feel that I have more insight into the culture, the family bonds, and the kinship that I am not witness to in Italy.
Profile Image for Jan Amidon.
153 reviews2 followers
June 12, 2024
I liked it a lot, it's a very in-depth account of a year in the life of an Australian living in Montalcino, Italy. But not her first year, her fifth, giving her more familiarity and allowing her to share lots of history that took her four years to learn. Interesting that these years were the late 1990s, almost 30 years ago, yet her main premise is the timelessness of the town's culture, so I suspect most of what she experienced still occurs today. I wish the title included Brunello instead of Brodo, since the wine-making is much more discussed than the soup-making! 442 pages ran a little long, but I wouldn't mind re-reading it, especially if I can ever return to Montalcino, where 8 years ago I was one of the clueless tourists she felt sorry for, wandering around for half a day not knowing what I was seeing!
Profile Image for Jaimini Mehta.
136 reviews2 followers
July 9, 2023
A really well written book! The author brings this part of the world to life in your very hands while you read, but a look so protects (and communicates the protection) of this place.
She is humble in her reflections and awareness and clearly passionate about Montalcino and the people and history. I would highly recommend! :)
Profile Image for Stuart.
172 reviews2 followers
April 6, 2024
Well I really struggled with this. I thought I'd love it since my wife and I have visited this stunning area but I found her narrative far too detailed on just what each and every villager was doing each and every day - so gave up 1/3 the way through.
A first for me!
Nice book cover and the opening history explanation was fascinating and then it was all downhill from there on.....sadly......
168 reviews1 follower
March 21, 2020
This one took me a long time to find the flow of and really get into. By by the end it turned into a charming portait of a small italian town and the characters within
59 reviews1 follower
April 13, 2021
Loved most of it, but some bits just far too detailed, eg archery tournaments, so I skipped a few pages here and there.
12 reviews
April 22, 2021
A wonderful account of life in a Tuscan hill town, one fully gets the atmosphere of Montalcino and I would recomend La Grappolo Bleau for the food and more especially the Brunello
Profile Image for Alayne.
2,491 reviews8 followers
September 11, 2025
3 and a half stars. An interesting view of a year living in a Tuscan village, but it was too detailed and I felt it got bogged down in those details.
Profile Image for Alison.
65 reviews3 followers
August 30, 2015
I thought this was a really nice companion to our trip to Tuscany. I wish I had finished it before we came home so we could have spent some more educated hours in Montalchino, but I'm glad for the time we spent because I can now get a more rounded picture from the book.
I do wish it was more recent or updated. Written in 2001, I asked myself how relevant this was to today. How much has changed over 15 years?

I did think Ms. Dusi sounded kind of arrogant at times. She talks so much about the ideals of being a native, but she, herself, is not a native. She is also an outsider. So when she looks down on a couple of American tourists, it caught me by surprise. These American tourists don't know what they don't know.

But this book did offer a unique and inside look at the village and gave me a new respect for the things we had seen.
Profile Image for Nicole Hunter-Mostafa.
30 reviews4 followers
April 9, 2016
it took me a long time to finish this book, but i'm glad i did. part of it was the structure of the book--it is arranged into seasons, which makes sense, but doesn't give the book much of a strong narrative. also, the writing is very heavy, has lots of run-on sentences, and often times comes across as a sort of literary painting--not much action or dialogue, but long, winding descriptions of scenery, which, although lovely, didn't entice me to plow through the book. even the amusing parts felt weighted down by the density of the writing. still, it really makes me want to visit montalcino someday.
Profile Image for Amy.
Author 2 books162 followers
January 10, 2009
Nice book. Different than the usual sort of "see how well we fit in and have become a real part of the village in no time flat" or the folks who want to give pictures of all the quaint folk they meet in their time.

I was a champion Archer in my youth and so the archery talk was quite fascinating. As was the history of the rivalry between Florence and Sienna and the unfolding of the beautiful Tuscan hills.
Profile Image for Anna.
3,522 reviews195 followers
February 17, 2013
I liked this book more than Almost French: A New Life in Paris. It's about community in small town in Tuscany, Italy. We get to know the traditions. But it's also another book about English-speaking person moving to famous Tuscany, an Italian region for pilgrimiges of loads of Americans, British or Australians.
Profile Image for Trenchologist.
589 reviews9 followers
January 17, 2017
Definitely serves its purpose in conveying life in this village, with commentary of the people and their history & traditions. For me it borders on almost too rapturous and filled with unending succulent detail -- but then again that prevents it from being a dry recitation of fact. I carried this with me for a few weeks as my subway read and it worked as that quite handily: easy to get absorbed into, but easy to leave again at my stop.
Profile Image for Rebekkila.
1,260 reviews16 followers
July 30, 2010
It was great to read about a part of the world that I have never been to, but would love to visit. I wonder if the locals are as standoffish as she paints them to be. I loved the chapters that focused on the individual stories of some of the residents of Montalcino. I did feel though, that the history of the town could have been a bit more linear.
506 reviews
July 19, 2013
This was a nice summer read. At times, however, it seemed too detailed and a little difficult to keep track of the multitude of locals she discussed. I learned a little history about this hilltop medieval village in Italy, and especially about its wine production. Now I've got a hankering to try a bottle of Brunello di Montalcino.
Profile Image for Kellie Schofield.
19 reviews
January 5, 2012
To be honest I barely started this book - I got bored very quickly by so much description that seemed, maybe , just a little bit cheesy. I hate giving up on a book, but there you are, maybe I'll come back to this one and try again.
Profile Image for Kate Rogers.
11 reviews1 follower
April 5, 2013
I could not finish this book, I just couldn't get into it or even start to enjoy it, which saddened me as I love Italy & wanted to read about the place. I'm weighing up giving it away or hanging onto it to try again another time.
Profile Image for Michael O'Donnell.
415 reviews7 followers
October 29, 2013
Be prepared for lots of detail about geography, history and wine.

I think it is Real Life in Tuscany through rose coloured glasses.

Not a warts and all account. No warts. I have no idea what the Italians would make of it.

Still.....well written. I liked the 4 seasons structure.



438 reviews5 followers
October 10, 2007
brutal. tuscany is beautiful...(I liked Under the Tuscan Sun) but this was a new level of cheese on Italy life and how "quaint" it is.
57 reviews1 follower
January 2, 2011
A British/Australian couple move to Montalcino in Tuscany. I just about gave up as it was boring and far too descriptive, but it got better in the second half where are least some things happened.
396 reviews9 followers
January 3, 2012
I recommend if you are inspired to try something different with your life.

Read the full review at OurBookClub
Profile Image for RoseInaBook.
6 reviews
November 20, 2011
A nice idea but over descriptive and so badly written, I really struggled to finish this but I forced myself to as I hate leaving a book half read.
Profile Image for JoEllen Hothem.
46 reviews8 followers
September 15, 2013
I REALLY enjoyed this book. It made me feel like I really knew Montalcino and when we finally visited there I felt like I was coming back to a place I had been before.
159 reviews1 follower
June 30, 2015
A lovely, inquisitive book that examines one particular town in depth.
28 reviews
January 1, 2019
i spent a good amount of time in montalcino while i was in tuscany and loved it; truly an amazing town. i really wish i had read this book before going. we tried to learn the history and the language before our trip, wanting to avoid being the obvious tourist, which really was unavoidable. the author is an austrailian who moved to montalcino so her perspective is as "inside" as is possible for an outsider. i remember seeing the people and places she describes and now they have more meaning. i really hope i'm able to visit there again.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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