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The winner of the Crime Writers Association Macallan Silver Daggeravailable for the first time in the United States
Donna Leon's sophisticated Commissario Brunetti series has won her legions of fans over the years. In Friends in High Places, Brunetti is visited by a young bureaucrat investigating the lack of official approval for the building of Brunetti's apartment years before. What began as a red tape headache ends in murder when the bureaucrat is found dead after a mysterious fall from a scaffold. Brunetti starts an investigation that will take him into unfamiliar and dangerous areas of Venetian life, and will reveal, once again, what a difference it makes to have friends in high places.
250 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2000

Before Brunetti can solve this problem, the person who had given him the information about his home is found dead. As he investigates a case relating to drug dealing and money laundering, a chain of events occur that seem connected to the official’s death.
At no time did it occur to him, as it did not occur to Paola, to approach the matter legally, to find out the names of the proper offices and officials and the proper steps to follow. Nor did it occur to either one of them that there might be a clearly defined bureaucratic procedure by which they could resolve the problem.I love the leisure pacing of these books, and enjoy watching Brunetti go through the clues and steps in the investigation.
The beautiful and sinister parts of what make Venice such an interesting setting.
Brunetti spent the next hour contemplating greed, a vice for which Venetians had always had a natural propensity.Somewhere I read that Leon's publishers have permission to have her works translated into any language except Italian. I think this quote helps explain why she withholds those rights. She has lived in Venice for many many years and I think she enjoys living in her adopted country. She also chooses to show it in less than flattering ways.