i tried starting with Serene. i cannot finish this book with a straight face, i'm rolling my eyes a lot. the style in which it's written is too melodramatic. everything is a tragedy, or an average complainy mess of a very self-centred person with very shallow worries. i really did not like it, i was expecting a nice descriptive travel-inspired journal, focused on notes on architecture and city life, and i was disappointed.
..on another note, i used this book to do improv acting, to gain range of expression, and i found it quite useful for this, since it's so melodramatic, with a lot of insinuated thoughts that are not expressed clearly or connected well, forcing you to get creative and complete the sentences/paragraphs to paint a better picture of the characters. it worked like this for me, so i added 1 star for that...even though i would have initially rated it 1 star, as a normal book, for general lecture.
Basilica and Angels where better, less melodrama, but still there, read them sparsely, since they were so short. Browsed through Rome, and spotted the same problem, so i dropped the book completely at that point.
Note: my book's name is "In Italy", but it's about Venice and Rome as well, there is no book named "In Italy" here by this author, and it says in the Acknowledgements that "In Italy" contains "Two Cities", plus the two very short stories Angels and Basilica, published in The Paris Review, so not a major difference, the main content of the book is still made up of Serene and Rome.