A Thousand Days in Venice (Ballantine Reader's Circle)
A Thousand Days in Venice (Ballantine Reader's Circle) book cover

A Thousand Days in Venice (Ballantine Reader's Circle)

Paperback – June 3, 2003

Price
$9.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345457646
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.75 x 7 inches
Weight
7 ounces

Description

Review “An irresistible grown-up love story.”— USA Today “AN APPEALING TALE OF A TRUE ROMANCE AND A SECOND CHANCE . . . A Thousand Days in Venice is a little cioppino of a book, a tasty stew with equal parts travel and food and romance, spiced up with goodly amounts of fantasy-come-true.”— The Seattle Post Intelligencer “Move over, Bridges of Madison County . Here comes real romance— with recipes, yet. . . . A beautifully written memoir. . . . The ‘happily ever after’ is riveting and the recipes are mouthwatering just to read.”— The Philadelphia Inquirer From the Back Cover “An irresistible grown-up love story.”— USA Today “AN APPEALING TALE OF A TRUE ROMANCE AND A SECOND CHANCE . . . A Thousand Days in Venice is a little cioppino of a book, a tasty stew with equal parts travel and food and romance, spiced up with goodly amounts of fantasy-come-true.”— The Seattle Post Intelligencer “Move over, Bridges of Madison County . Here comes real romance— with recipes, yet. . . . A beautifully written memoir. . . . The ‘happily ever after’ is riveting and the recipes are mouthwatering just to read.”— The Philadelphia Inquirer About the Author Marlena de Blasi has been a chef, a journalist, a food and wine consultant, and a restaurant critic. She is the author of two cookbooks, Regional Foods of Northern Italy (a James Beard Foundation Award finalist) and Regional Foods of Southern Italy. She and her husband, Fernando, now direct gastronomic tours through Tuscany and Umbria. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1Signora, the Telephone Is for YouThe small room is filled with German tourists, a few English, and a table or two of locals. It’s November 6, 1993, and I arrived in Venice that morning, two friends in tow. We speak quietly together, sipping Amarone. Time passes and the room empties, but I notice that one table, the one farthest away from us, remains occupied. I feel the gentle, noninvasive stare of one of the four men who sit there. I turn my shoulders in, toward my wine, never really looking at the man. Soon the gentlemen go off, and we three are alone in the place. A few minutes pass before a waiter comes by to say there is a telephone call for me. We have yet to announce our arrival to friends, and even if someone knew we were in Venice, they couldn’t possibly know we were lunching at Vino Vino. I tell the waiter he’s mistaken. “No, signora. Il telefono è per Lei,” he insists. “Pronto,” I say into the old, orange wall telephone that smells of smoke and men’s cologne.“Pronto. Is it possible for you to meet me tomorrow at the same time? It’s very important for me,” says a deep, deliberate, Italian voice I’d never heard before. In the short silence that follows it somehow clicks that he is one of the men who’d left the restaurant just moments before. Though I’ve understood fairly well what he has said, I can’t respond in Italian. I mumble some linguistic fusion like, “No, grazie. I don’t even know who you are,” thinking that I really like his voice.The next day we decide to return to Vino Vino because of its convenience to our hotel. I don’t think about the man with the beautiful voice. But he’s there, and this time he’s without his colleagues and looking more than a little like Peter Sellers. We smile. I go off to sit with my friends, and he, seeming not quite to know how to approach us, turns and goes out the door. A few beats pass before the same waiter, now feeling a part of something quite grand, comes to me, eyes direct: “Signora, il telefono è per Lei.” There ensues a repeat of yesterday’s scene. I go to the phone, and the beautiful voice speaks in very studied English, perhaps thinking it was his language I hadn’t understood the day before: “Is it possible for you to meet me tomorrow, alone?”“I don’t think so,” I fumble, “I think I’m going to Naples.”“Oh,” is all the beautiful voice can say.“I’m sorry,” I say and hang up the phone.We don’t go to Naples the next day or the day after, but we do go to the same place for lunch, and Peter Sellers is always there. We never speak a word face to face. He always telephones. And I always tell him I can’t meet him. On the fifth day—a Friday—our last full day in Venice, my friends and I spend the morning at Florian mapping the rest of our journey, drinking Prosecco and cups of bitter, thick chocolate lit with Grand Marnier. We decide not to have lunch but to save our appetites for a farewell dinner at Harry’s Bar. Walking back to the hotel, we pass by Vino Vino, and there is Peter Sellers, his nose pressed against the window. A lost child. We stop in the calle a moment, and my friend Silvia says, “Go inside and talk to him. He has the dearest face. We’ll meet you at the hotel.”I sit down next to the sweet face with the beautiful voice, and we drink some wine. We talk very little, something about the rain, I think, and why I didn’t come to lunch that day. He tells me he is the manager of a nearby branch of Banca Commerciale Italiana, that it’s late, and he has the only set of keys to reopen the safe for the after-noon’s business. I notice the sweet face with the beautiful voice has wonderful hands. His hands tremble as he gathers his things to leave. We agree to meet at six-thirty that evening, right there, in the same place. “Proprio qui, Right here,” he repeats again and again.I walk to the hotel with a peculiar feeling and spend the afternoon lolling about my little room, only half celebrating my tradition of reading Thomas Mann in bed. Even after all these years of coming to Venice, every afternoon is a ritual. Close by on the night table I place some luscious little pastry or a few cookies or, if lunch was too light, maybe one, crusty panino which Lino at the bottega across the bridge from my Pensione Accademia has split and stuffed with prosciutto, then wrapped in butcher’s paper. I tuck the down quilt under my arms and open my book. But today I read and don’t read the same page for an hour. And the second part of the ritual falls away altogether, the part where I wander out to see images Mann saw, touch stones he touched. Today all I can think about is him.The persevering rain becomes a tempest that night, but I am resolved to meet the stranger. Lagoon waters splash up and spill over onto the river in great foaming pools and the Piazza is a lake of black water. The winds seem the breath of furies. I make my way to the warm safety of the bar at the Hotel Monaco but no farther. Less than a few hundred yards from Vino Vino, I’m so close but I can get no closer. I go to the desk and ask for a telephone directory, but the wine bar is not listed. I try calling assistenza but operator number 143 finds nothing. The rendezvous is a wreckage, and I haven’t a way to contact Peter Sellers. It was just not meant to be. I head back to the hotel bar, where a waiter called Paolo stuffs my soaked boots with newspaper and places them near a radiator with the same ceremony someone else might use to stow the crown jewels. I’ve known Paolo since my first trip to Venice four years earlier. Stocking-footed, fidgeting, drinking tea, I sit on the damp layers of my skirt, which sends up the wooly perfume of wet lambs, and watch fierce, crackling lights rip the clouds. I think back to my very first time in Venice. Lord, how I fought that journey! I’d been in Rome for a few days, and I’d wanted to stay. But there I was, hunkered down in a second-class train, heading north. “ARE YOU GOING TOVENICE?” asks a small voice in tentative Italian, trespassing on my Roman half-dream.I open my eyes and look out the window to see we have pulled into Tiburtina. Two young, pink-faced German women are hoisting their great packs up into the overhead space, thrusting their ample selves down onto the seat opposite me. “Yes,” I finally answer, in English, to a space somewhere between them. “For the first time,” I say.They are serious, shy, dutifully reading the Lorenzetti guide to Venice and drinking mineral water in the hot, airless train car as it lunges and bumps over the flat Roman countryside and up into the Umbrian hills. I close my eyes again, trying to find my place in the fable of life in the Via Giulia where I’d taken roof-top rooms in the ochered-rose palazzo that sits across from the Hungarian Art Academy. I’d decided I would go each Friday to eat a bowlful of tripe at Da Felice in the Testaccio. I would shop every morning in Campo dei Fiori. I’d open a twenty-seat taverna in the Ghetto, one big table where the shop keeps and artisans would come to eat the good food I’d cook for them. I’d take a Corsican prince as my lover. His skin would smell of neroli blossoms, and he’d be poor as I would be, and we’d walk along the Tiber, going softly into our dotage. As I begin putting together the exquisite pieces of the prince’s face, the trespasser’s small voice asks, “Why are you going to Venice? Do you have friends there?”“No. No friends,” I tell her. “I guess I’m going because I’ve never been there, because I think I should,” I say, more to myself than to her. I have hopelessly lost the prince’s face for the moment, and so I parry: “And why are you going to Venice?”“For romance,” says the inquisitive one very simply.My plainer truth is that I am going to Venice because I’m being sent there, to gather notes for a series of articles. Twenty-five hundred words on the bacari, traditional Venetian wine bars; twenty-five hundred more on the question of the city’s gradual sinking into the lagoon; and an upscale dining review. I would rather have stayed in Rome. I want to go back to my narrow green wooden bed in the strange little room tucked up in the fourth-floor eaves of the Hotel Adriano. I want to sleep there, to be awakened by powdery sunlight sifting in through the chinks in the shutters. I like the way my heart beats in Rome, how I can walk faster and see better. I like that I feel at home wandering through her ancient ecstasy of secrets and lies. I like that she’s taught me I am only a scintilla, a barely perceptible and transient gleam.And I like that at lunch, with fried artichokes on my breath, I think of sup-per. And at supper I remember peaches that wait in a bowl of cool water near my bed. I’ve nearly retrieved the pieces of the prince’s face as the train lurches over the Ponte della Libertà. I open my eyes to see the lagoon.Back then I could never have imagined how sweetly thisravishing old Princess was to gather me up into her tribe, how she would dazzle and dance the way only she can, exploding a morning with gold-shot light, soaking an evening in the bluish mists of a trance. I smile at Paolo, a tribal smile, a soundless eloquence. He stays near, keeping my teapot full. It’s after eleven-thirty before the storm rests. I pull on boots all hardened into the shape of the newsprint stuffing. Damp hat over still-damp hair, still-damp coat, I gather myself for the walk back to the hotel. Something prickles, shivers forward in my consciousness. I try to remember if I’d told the stranger where we were staying. What’... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • He saw her across the Piazza San Marco and fell in love from afar. When he sees her again in a Venice café a year later, he knows it is fate. He knows little English; and she, a divorced American chef, speaks only food-based Italian. Marlena thinks she is incapable of intimacy, that her heart has lost its capacity for romantic love. But within months of their first meeting, she has packed up her house in St. Louis to marry Fernando—“the stranger,” as she calls him—and live in that achingly lovely city in which they met.Vibrant but vaguely baffled by this bold move, Marlena is overwhelmed by the sheer foreignness of her new home, its rituals and customs. But there are delicious moments when Venice opens up its arms to Marlena. She cooks an American feast of Mississippi caviar, cornbread, and fried onions for the locals . . . and takes the tango she learned in the Poughkeepsie middle school gym to a candlelit trattoría near the Rialto Bridge. All the while, she and Fernando, two disparate souls, build an extraordinary life of passion and possibility.Featuring Marlena’s own incredible recipes,
  • A Thousand Days in Venice
  • is the enchanting true story of a woman who opens her heart—and falls in love with both a man and a city.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(371)
★★★★
25%
(309)
★★★
15%
(186)
★★
7%
(87)
23%
(284)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

ponderous tale of weighty self-reflection

everyone else seems to love this book - the star I awarded it was only in recognition of the wonderful city of venice in which it is set and the not frequent enough references to food and recipes contained therein. for the rest of it - I could have screamed. I think I might have.
Ms de Blasi has a very ponderous writing style - when I finally hit her expression in which I paraphrase she savoured time like an apronful of warm figs, I hit my limit. Every step she takes is weighty, every mouthful she eats has depth and every observation she makes she imparts as if burdened with wisdom.
and a healthy dose of self-esteem - we are assured she transferred a grotty venetian apartment into a haven of domesticity and style with a deft hand and some old scarves. After taking such a bold move in moving countries, she then seems to decide enough decisions have been made and leaves every other turn and ramble their life takes to The Stranger, who appears kinda weak-willed and slack jawed and rather irritating after a while.
for venice and an appreciation of food and the role it plays in life, only just enough to get me through the self-satisfied prosey prose.
29 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Just okay

I was looking forward to this book but was disappointed. I just could not connect with the author which I think is a very important part of enjoying this genre of reading. She seemed to jump into life-altering things without a lot of thought and then expects the reader to be sympathetic. It is just okay - I have read much worse but also many that are far superior. It is written with the author at the center rather than with the author trying to learn about and become part of place as the central theme. Hard to describe - but something important was missing that kept me from becoming emotionally involved with the author - I just wanted to say 'stop complaining - why didn't you think this out before?".
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

More a food/travel book

Hmmmm where to begin with the review...

I read the cover jacket and I had to read this novel, after all who doesn't want to hear the details of a genuine love story with the setting being Venice Italy - unless you lack a pulse you will want to know the details of the romance the jacket noted. Sadly, the book was more a travel/food writing than it was a love story. Don't get me wrong Ms. de Blasi did a wonderful job painting the picturesque city of Venice and its people and culture, Ms. de Blasi even included some scrumptious recipes. I felt the author failed to touch upon the romance, after all this is a memoir of a love story. The author spent more time and detail explaining Venice and food she skipped over the love of her life. The book felt emotionally void for me, I want more details of what she was feeling and how she fell in love. Ms. de Blasi is a food journalist and it is apparent in this novel by her continued description of Venice's culinary offerings. The style is terribly descriptive (food wise, not so much in the romantic department), almost too descriptive and it seems flowery at times but...she left a enough of the story where I am wondering if the follow up novel would provide more details into the actual love story. I will add, the differences between the couple was touched upon, after all they are strangers that don't know each other and they decide to merge their worlds - you know there is going to be some potholes in their world but again, the love aspect was flat and I was wanting more details.

If you're looking for a book to read at the beach or on a plane this is for you. I had high expectations for this book and I was disappointed.
5 people found this helpful
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Boring

Surely it's many women's dream to be attracting a stranger and marry off to a Venetian, but this is a really boring story. I tried to read it many times and just can't get into it, although I'm a big fan of Italy and Venice is one of my favorite cities. I enjoyed reading the "Mediterranean Summer" by David Shalleck much better.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Enchanting Yet Realistic

Though the basis seemed initially farfetched, I fell in love with this book. If she wouldn't have expressed her frustration about the reality of submersing herself in a foreign land and getting to really know the person she found herself having unexplainable feelings for, the book really would have seemed too much like a fairytale. She adds just enough of reality to this to keep it passionate and believable. The way Marlene communicates gives hope to the cynical and makes a true romantic justified in his/her beliefs.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

It took me a year to finish this book.....;-)

I (sadly) am not a reader, simply because of time limitations. Still, I buy every interesting book written on my favorite subject: Italy and those who visit her and share their intimate tales of experiences with her. Sometimes I simply buy them for an interesting cover photo or painting! Usually I'm disappointed, or can't ever find time or interest to finish them....they line my shelves. However, I bought this book and began it last summer, and was immediately obsessed by every wonderful aspect of it...Venezia,the intrigue of the first meeting (strangely, at a wine bar I'd visited several times by accident just last spring), the perfect descriptive narrative and incorporation of the Italian language, and the love story of these two blessed souls. And yet, I couldn't finish it...only this time it was totally because I haven't wanted it to end!!!!!!!!! Today, on vacation, and with sadness (not for any kind of disappointment, but for me not having more to read!),I finally read the last page. I then devoured the recipes pages...and can't wait to make my own stuffed, roasted pumpkin on a fall NH day! I will relive the story of Marlena and Fernando forever (wish it were a movie), and will set off to read De Blasi's other books. I'm curious to know more early biographical information about the author, if anyone knows...her name sounds like a name from my past. Anyway, what an AMAZING book....what AMAZING writing!!!!!! What a treat for the spirit of everyone who loves Italy and Venezia!!! READ IT!!!
2 people found this helpful
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Intelligent, not wasteful with words

I thoroughly delighted in this true story only after getting through the preposterous, high fructose corn syrup sappy, first 20 pages - factual though they may be. Having guffawed, rolled my eyes, and saying out loud to no one, "I am not reading this!" at page 12, weeks later I picked it up with my interest piqued and didn't put it back down until the end. Marlena is an intelligent writer, never wasteful with her perfect words and allusions. She was enraptured with her Italian settings and immersed in them, not distant from their ancient exoticism like so many authors who prattle on with some cold, repeated, textbook authority. I would read anything by her again in a heartbeat. There is purity and security both in her romance and her writing. Actually she is pretty inspirational by simply following her heart, her loves.
2 people found this helpful
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Fantastic, candid memoir!

I was really impressed by the author's honesty in chronicling her new life in Venice and the changes that came with her marriage. She didn't sugarcoat the bad parts and unlike others, I understood the narrative reason why she continued to call her husband "the stranger". Who has not gotten married and at one time or another thought, "Who is this? Did I marry this person?"
I loved her attention to detail of Venetian life and culture and the care in which she described the people she came in contact with. A truly enjoyable book from cover to cover...and some day I'll be brave enough to try the recipes in the back!
2 people found this helpful
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Life is ripe with possibilty!

This book was a nice read, nice little "fantasy". I enjoyed her description of the sights and smells of Venice. I imagined myself moving to a foreign land, learning to fit in, making new friends, learning the customs. I would have had difficulty being so trusting of the "Stranger", but her story inspires me and reminds me that I can change course at any time to reshape my destiny. Life, if we are lucky, is long, and full of possibility. Lesson learned-Dare to dream-then go for it!
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Eh.....its wasnt the worst book I have ever read.

This books starts out ok....then it slows WAY down. The author jumps around alot. She will describe something happening in September then goes back to August, which I wouldnt mind if that were the tone of the book, I personally think it is just unorganized writing.

It appears that the author refers to her husband as the strange (really --- you did marry him) when she is angry with him and as Fernando (his name) when she is not...its weird to me.

Oh well, I did make it to the end but this short book took me weeks to power through it (I can normally read a book in days)...I kept waiting for the book to reach an interesting point or a turn of events, it just never did.
1 people found this helpful