Donna Leon's Brunetti series appears to be coming back to form after a couple of truly halfhearted, lackluster outings.
To me, the series has reached a sad tipping point with its home city. Venice has long been depicted with all its wonders, idiosyncrasies and annoyances. Increasingly, the series has focused on the impact too many visitors have on the diminishing quality not just of daily life, but of the city's buildings and many sites with broad appeal. And in an often charming way, the series has shown the daily irritations visited on the city's residents by not just the vagaries of the weather but also its too many, largely cluefree tourists. Here, Leon appears to be writing about a city post-elegaically. The Murano glass adored by many is no longer a product of skilled craftspeople, but is imported - by the ton - from China. Its residents speak almost wistfully of wishing "acqua alta", formerly a dreaded event, upon the city to cleanse it.
Her description of Brunetti and Paolo (his wife) crossing the Rialto on the way home is just harrowing:
"When they arrived at the foot of the Rialto Bridge, they looked up, horrified. Anthills, termites, wasps. Ignoring these thoughts, they locked arms and started up, eyes on their feet and the area immediately in front of them. Up, up, up as feet descended towards them, but they ignored them and did not stop. Up, up, up and across the top, shoving their way through the motionless people, deaf to their cries of admiration. Then down, down, down, the momentum of their descent making them more formidable. They saw the feet of the people coming up towards them dance to the side at their approach, hardened their hearts to their protests, and plunged ahead. Then left and into the underpass, where they stopped. Brunetti's pulse raced and Paolo leaned helpless on his arm."
Somehow my commute from Berkeley to Palo Alto is being challenged for being simultaneously tedious and petrifying by this scary walk across a pedestrian bridge in Venice.
This story focuses on a burned-out Commissario Brunetti finding a work break at an estate (of a friend of Paolo's) which is out of the way. Paolo stays at home both to give her husband some space and to carve out some quiet reading time for herself. When he arrives, he quickly befriends the caretaker, Dave Casati. The two have a mutual love of rowing and quickly develop a daily routine of rowing and checking a number of bee colonies Casati has placed in obscure places. And they don't do sissy rowing in Venice like we Americans sitting down on our butts while we row. These men stand up. I admired the sportsmanship very much and hope never to experience it personally.
After 10 or so days, there is a storm from which Casati never returns. From there, the mystery has Brunetti and his team off on a hunt to discover the truth about Casati. And find out what happened many years ago in an accident,to Casati, his wife and his one friend, now estranged. One of the things I liked best about this book is how well Leon crafts layer upon layer upon layer. Although the reader will find many solutions to the mysteries, she has left open a number of questions in a very satisfying manner.
There are also some wonderful, almost whimsical touches. Casati's friend, Zeno Bianchi has lost his sight, the function and digits of one arm and many burns in the accident. So he is a man who lives in darkness. His dog is named Bardo.
All of this brings me to one of the things I like best about this work. Earthly Remains is a fine work of fiction that stands on its own as a book. But Leon's added theme of climate change vs. corporate interests means some pundits will write it off as a climate change potboiler as they did with Barbara Kingsolver's Flight Behavior. Kingsolver's book was first-rate fiction and Earthly Remains appears to me to be some of the best writing Leon has done in the last couple of years. Beware of thinking you can marginalize these books by pigeonholing them. You do so at your peril and the potential loss of a deeply satisfying read. Unlike many in the Brunetti series, I will read this book again. I recommend it highly.