book cover of Death in a Serene City
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Death in a Serene City

(1990)
(The first book in the Urbino McIntyre Venetian Mystery series)
A novel by

 
 
Publisher's Weekly
Subtitled A Novel of Venice , this debut mystery is distinguished by fully dimensioned characters and plentiful local color. When American writer Margaret Quinton leaps from her window into a Venetian canal, her ostensible suicide takes a back seat to the death of a poor washerwoman and the theft of a prized relic, the 1100-year-old body of Santa Teodora, from San Gabriele church. A disturbing visit from the washerwoman's son Carlo, who is the primary suspect in the theft, and his subsequent suicide prompt Urbino Macintyre to pursue the case, which the Italian police declare closed after discovering Carlo's body and the saint's remains. An American biographer of famous residents of Venice, Urbino enlists the aid of his British friend Barbara, a widowed contessa, as he begins to discover links between the washerwoman and Quinton in the latter's papers. Seeking information about the death of the washerwoman's daughter years before, Urbino makes his way from the parish to the glassblowers of Murano to the shuttered rooms of neighborhood widows and gossips. The intricate plot is steeped in particulars of Italian culture and custom. Discerning readers who enjoy a good puzzle will appreciate Urbino's quiet persistence and careful reasoning, and will look forward to his return.

Library Journal
A subdued and quietly refined but rather listless tone permeates Sklepowich's Venice, home of several English-speaking expatriates with local ties. Two fast friends, Urbino Macintyre and Barbara, Contessa da Capo Zendrini, attempt to solve the murder of an old woman devoted to the crystal-coffined remains of Santa Teodora in the old Church of San Gabriele. Urbino--taking time out from tea at Florian's--performs most of the legwork, visiting the dead woman's colleagues, reading a suicide's notebooks for clues, etc. Great for a wallow in atmosphere, but the exasperatingly slow exposition and development will numb the action-minded.


Genre: Mystery

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