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Benedetto Casanova - The Memoirs
 
 

Benedetto Casanova - The Memoirs [Kindle Edition]

Marten Weber
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

WINNER OF THE 2011 RAINBOW LITERARY AWARD FOR HISTORICAL FICTION

No doubt you have heard of Casanova, the famous womanizer, and maybe you have seen the movie, or read the account of his life. But did you know he may have had a gay brother?
Benedetto, a few years Giacomo’s junior, was pressed into service of the Church to follow the famous lover of women through the courts of Europe. On the way he had amorous adventures with countless men, but, unlike his brother, fell in love and kept alive a romantic relationship with a strapping German soldier over time and distance.
His "memoirs" were discovered only in 1881, when an English traveler rummaging through a private library in Rome found them glued to the pages of a book. They were written in Italian and have never before been published in English. Marten Weber delivers a wonderful "translation" of this challenging text, full of linguistic cunning and his usual talent for breathtaking eroticism.

About the Author

Marten Weber is the author of the highly acclaimed novel “Shayno” and several other books about the lives of men.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1137 KB
  • Print Length: 416 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1461010934
  • Publisher: Aquarius Publishing (18 Mar 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B004SBPKV6
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #181,023 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The story of the gay brother 17 Oct 2012
Format:Paperback
The 'story' starts in late teans. Explicite. The theme is constant which makes boring reading. A chapter at a time was enough for me
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5.0 out of 5 stars So gay that it becomes funny ah ah, definitely 12 Feb 2013
Format:Paperback
We all know the other Casanova, Giacomo, and it is a funny surprise to discover this Benedetto. The book covers most of the 18th century, a time when philosophers were trying to open up their minds to the future and to open up the minds of other people to what had to be done to let the sun rise. But the book is not that deeply involved with the philosophical debates of the time. It is more a long book about all kinds of gossips more than serious history or reflection.

The second element is that Benedetto has little to do with Giacomo. Officially they don't even know each other. Giacomo is a skirt chaser and Benedetto is a pants hunter, in fact more what is in the pants than the pants themselves. He is heavily descriptive of all his sexual affairs and who is who in good society. Gossips as I said, along with explicit scenes of what may happen between two men or more when they meet intimately.

The third interest is maybe the best one. They travel across Europe as if there were highways in those days and fast trains too. We visit all kinds of cities though he does not spend much time describing them since he is only interested in the dominant men he can seduce. Of course he has a long lasting love affair with a man from Dresden, Carl Anton, and it is this man who will accompany him in the second half of his adult life and finally to Rome where the book closes.

The most explicit element is in fact the very hypocritical duplicity of the people of the church at the top echelons of power, from the Pope to the bishops. They either take part in all the partying and gang bang in this life or at least witness and enjoy but apparently they do not waste too much time chasing the perverts and catching them.

Here and there some precise details may be given like the information about the 1750 burning of two homosexuals in the Place de Grève in Paris. He even gives their names, Bruno Lenoir and Jean Diot. Apparently it is a serious case that was vastly commented at the time and was brought up in the Paris City Council in May 2011 with the demand or wish from the Communists councilors that a plaque be erected in the neighborhood where they had been arrested. The book then might be interesting as a testimony about this period since Benedetto Casanova was a spy for the Pope to follow his brother more or less incognito who was suspected of being a spy for Venice trying to gather support for a reunification n of Northern Italy and the inclusion of Papal states into that project.

The book though is so heavily impregnated with gay sex and gay exchanges that the historical dimension becomes light and even doubtful. If you like erotic literature this is the book you can offer to your partner for Valentine's Day.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars good read 27 Nov 2011
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
i really enjoyed this book. Not really convinced these are "true" memoirs but more likely to be a fictional account, whether written in Victorian times(when they were supposedly found)or more modern. Still very well written and entertaining.
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Popular Highlights

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Pious people really do not understand our kind, but then I doubt they understand much else in this world, and thus can safely be ignored. &quote;
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
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How infinitely more honest than the pious folk around me, who claim all in the name of Christ’s love, but only sow hatred! &quote;
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believe, however, that in the end, we do not love men or women, but human beings, and that the sex of the one we love is not the most important thing. &quote;
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