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Drawing Conclusions
 
 
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Drawing Conclusions [Paperback]

Donna Leon
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Arrow (1 Mar 2012)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0099559765
  • ISBN-13: 978-0099559764
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 12.8 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,085 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Donna Leon
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Product Description

Review

"There is always doubt mixed with anticipation before diving into the latest in a favorite mystery series. The uncertainty is always there -- will it deliver the same fascination as previous books? Or will it disappoint? ... The compelling characters and complex plot in Leon's "Drawing Conclusions "place it among her best. The atmosphere of the city, along with Leon's sharp insights and powerful narrative, validate her often-recognized status as a master of literary crime fiction."--Merle Minda, Minneapolis Star-Tribune

Book Description

The 20th Commissario Brunetti novel from Donna Leon, the Sunday Times bestselling author of A Question of Belief

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
42 of 43 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
An old woman is found dead; it appears to be natural causes - a heart attack; except there are a few marks on the corpse which aren't absolutely consonant with that verdict. Brunetti can't ignore them, and is led into an investigation which leads to a dreadful evil behind the death.
If you want thrills and fast action, look elsewhere. To do that, though, would be a shame, because the way Leon tells the story exactly parallels the nature of the crime and the evil: they're hidden things, things society would sooner ignore, things which require careful vision to see.
So the investigation unfolds gently, slowly and not always obviously; yet always inexorably, until we are brought, with Brunetti, to the truth, and the central evil of the book.
It would be a shame if a writer of Donna Leon's class were condemned to write variations on a theme, as so many crime writers do. Each of her books has a different register; she is ready to try new ways of writing and unfolding a plot. And that means, inevitably, that not every one of her fans will like each book. Yet, to me at least, this one is a gem: understated but vital, and never after effect for the sake of effect. So what if Patta et al take a back seat? That's what this story requires, so that's how Leon writes it.
Ignore the nay-sayers and see for yourself...
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By Bluebell TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
The basic story of this book, an elderly woman found dead, is it an accident or is it murder, provides a back-drop for the author to explore morality issues of Italian life: mainly corruption and exploitation of women from Eastern Europe.

I'm surprised that some reviewers have felt that this book was not as good as previous Donna Leon novels. I thought it was up to her usual high standard. I don't read her Commissario Brunetti books for the detective element, more for the atmosphere of Venice and Italian life: both good and bad. She has created a range of well-rounded characters whose lives I enjoy following in the series. Brunetti is unusual in detective fiction that he's basically a happy man, with a stable family life, who doesn't drink to excess or smoke endless cigarettes, and who gets on well with his assistant, Vianello and is thus a welcome contrast to the almost universal character clichés of other detective series. A favourite character for me is Signorina Electra and her amazing computer hacking skills and her dead-pan approach to her pompous and lazy boss, Vice-Questore, Patta.
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63 of 69 people found the following review helpful
By bookelephant TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I begin to wonder whether Donna Leon has exhausted her interest in Brunetti and the world she has created for him. I almost felt at points in the book that she was simply rushing through to get the book out to schedule. Like a previous reviewer I felt the nods to Brunetti's world almost perfunctory: Elletra, Vianello, Paola and the children all make their due appearances doing something characteristic, but they do not develop at all as personalities (which is a sadness for all long term readers, and I felt particularly an opportunity missed with Chiara and Rafi - I mean really, isn't there always something new with teenagers?). Personally I missed most the descriptions of Paola's cooking - I always linger over the pages which describe her dishing up, and them enjoying her beautiful seasonal recipes - this time a couple of lines tell us what the family has, and you can go away and look it up in a cookbook if you want more. Mean, I call it!
But to the detective aspect of the book, which is what we are all theoretically there for - how about that? Well, agaiin I felt that Donna Leon was slightly bored by the format. Yes, we get a mystery - an elderly lady is found dead. It could be a heart attack but there are some indications which suggest violence which may have precipitated the heart attack. The son is well in with Patta, but behaves mysteriously, the finder of the body may have links to the Mafia, the spare bedroom of the flat is plain odd. We get a resolution, of course, but it is frankly not very satisfactory qua detective fiction resolution - and the red herrings are not enjoyably played out along the way - just floated and dropped.
Where Leon seems more to be going is a slightly downbeat state of the nation review. Her disenchatment with Italy's political system is often seen in the books, but there seems to be a more overarching feeling of depression with the malaise underpinning the book. She looks at the way that corruption is endemic even amongst the good guys - how does Elletra get those armfuls of flowers past accounts, how many laws does Brunetti ask her to break when he gets her to do some hackery on the side of the angels, how much impact does a gift of champagne have on a degree result? And she also asks: are we wrong to see truth as a good - is it not in some cases awful and best not spoken - for our own sakes and for others? And how do we best protect and preserve the only things which really matter? The questions are interesting and the situations created to pose them are well drawn - but again they are not as fully developed as I would have liked.
So for the first time ever, I put down my new Donna Leon with a sense of disappointment. Of course I will buy the next one, but with lower expectations - and with a hope that in the intervening year she has decided to commit herself fully to the book in one direction or another.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Magnifico
Donna Leon maintains her pedigree as an excellent crime writer. Guido Brunetti is an astute detective, but with his own sense of what constitutes justice.
Published 19 hours ago by col42
Losing the plot
I have been an avid follower of Brunetti both because I love detective fiction and I'm a frequent visitor to Venice.
For the first time, the writer fails on both count. Read more
Published 22 days ago by jbscotland
DONNA LEON
Drawing Conclusions is not quite up to the usual standard of Donna Leon's novels.It is less entertaining and characters not as interesting as usual.
Published 1 month ago by Mr. D. G. White
Better on re-reading
Perhaps not the most action packed or surprise plotted book, but one of her best in examining human reactions and motivation.
Published 1 month ago by Brian Harris
A meeting with old friends
If you are looking for a slick detective story forget it - this Donna Leon book is, as always,so much more. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Theresa
Death of a good woman
An elderly lady is found dead in her apartment by a neighbour. She had a heart condition and the death could have been natural causes. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Damaskcat
Plodding
This book was set as one of our reads for our book club. It was the first time I had read anything by this author and the fact that the book is one of a series meant that I was... Read more
Published 4 months ago by JillyG
Good, but not her best
Without giving too much away, this is quite similar to her latest novels- a departure from your standard whodunnit. Read more
Published 6 months ago by HP
Definitely a return to better form
Like most Donna Leon fans I think that quality of the Brunetti books has decreased in recent years with far too much emphasis on his family and not enough plot - and too much... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Mrs. L. Watson
Another Captivating Tale
Book 20, in the Commissario Guido Brunetti Mystery

As usual Ms. Leon's social concerns always play a prominent component of her mysteries; in her latest tale she looks... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Toni Osborne
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