Hugh Thurne is a diplomat in love with a young Venetian woman when his best friend's widow, Violet Mancroft, arrives in Venice from England. Violet is still absorbed by grief but she is also troubled by the direction her relationship with Hugh might now take. Violet is also preoccupied by anxiety for her son, Robert, who has fallen in love with Gloria Venier, a young Grand Canal girl. Unlike Violet, Giacomo Venier is amused by his daughter's fledgling relationship - but he is dying, leaving his wife Valentina to maintain their dilapidated palace and face financial ruin, and to bring up their teenage children alone. From the English coast to Venice and Britain's dominions in the East, this is a novel about empires and their crises, about the desolation and the hope after the Great War, about death, time and memory, and innocent - and less innocent - love. And it is a passionate study of the crisis of societies in peace and in war, and of the bewildering perversities of continually reawakening love.
By the Grand Canal is a quiet, thoughtful novel about a group of friends who gather again in Venice after having been separated by the First World War. Naturally, they have all, from oldest to youngest, experienced deprivation as a result of the conflict, but now they hope to regain some of their former security and happiness. It is not to be, not simply because of the changes the war has wrought, but because life goes on. Although the fighting has blessedly stopped, people still grow up and grow old, get sick, die, leave each other, and have wishes that do or do not come true. This novel has a loosely constructed plot that is more philosophy and musing than action, which is probably not to everyone's taste. But it does capture the sense of ennui that settles after any great catastrophe, and the two questions that are addressed here are "Why?" and "Why not?" Even the grandeur and beauty of Venice cannot change reality, and in some respects, By the Grand Canal is reminiscent of Mann's Death in Venice in tone and mood as well as setting.
For me, this book required and repaid close attention. I probably left it unfinished and went on to something less demanding several times. Because I found the language gorgeous many times, I sometimes let myself lose the narrative or descriptive thread when my attention was not really sharply focused--just the music of the words was compelling. The stor7 also repays close attention. It reminds me of inevitable loss and the fading of past places, people, and experiences.
Set in post-WWI Venice, this book has some interesting insights into Italy's place in that war and the effects on Venice, in particular. But, while there are some lovely, small, descriptive passages, for the most part the writing is unsubstantial and the characters never really come to life as well as they should.
I got about half way through this book but will not finish it. It has periods of the book that are interesting, but I am having a tough time keeping my interest and it's hard to keep track of the various characters.
Ah! I love Riviere. His period detail is amazing, and the characters are folks you can really appreciate, as they are complex and so well-drawn. Unfortunately, he hasn’t written that much, so I’m savoring.
This book was a perfect fit for me. An Edwardian English diplomat, Hugh Thurne, struggles to find himself in a dead-end marriage and a not-so-great career as a diplomat just after World War I. While, technically, the Edwardian Era “ended” with the death of it’s namesake, Edward VII, in 1910, that generation carried on administering the war and its aftermath.
The story moves with the speed of its era–slowly, gracefully, with measured steps. Hugh’s thoughts, his musings, his “re-thinkings,” are centered on the three women of his life–his young Venetian mistress, his bored wife, and his recently deceased best friend’s widow. An Edwardian midlife crisis couched in the beauty and grace of its era.
I think this is the first book I’ve ever found and enjoyed that had almost no reviews on Amazon, yet was commercially published. (There were a few more on the British Amazon page). If you enjoy period pieces like Merchant Ivory films, you will enjoy this book.
By the Grand Canal by William Riviere My rating 4 Stars