| LifeinItaly.com - Fashion, Travel, News and More. | |  | Umbrian Majolica | Home » » The Lady in the Palazzo: At Home in Umbria | | | | | | | Description: | | With the breathless anticipation that seduced her readers to fall in love with Venice and then Tuscany, Marlena de Blasi now takes us on a new journey as she moves with her husband, Fernando, to Orvieto, a large and ancient city in Italy's Umbria. Having neither an edge to a sea nor a face to a foreign land, it's a region less trampled by travelers and, in turn, less accepting of strangers. So de Blasi sets out to establish her niche in this new place and to win over her new neighbors by doing what she does best, cooking her way into their hearts. (Her recipes are included.) Rich with history and a vivid sense of place, her memoir is by turns romantic and sensual, joyous and celebratory, as she searches for the right balance in this city on the hill, as well as the right home—which turns out to be the former ballroom of a dilapidated sixteenth-century palazzo. De Blasi meets and makes friends with an array of colorful, memorable characters, including cooks and counts and shepherds and a lone violinist, and their stories, too, become a part of the tapestry of life that she weaves for herself in Orvieto. With a voice full of wonder, she brings to life these engagingly quirky people and the aloof, almost daunting society that exists in Umbria. Not since Peter Mayle's A Year in Provence has a writer so happily succeeded in capturing the essence of a singular place and in creating a feast for readers of all stripes. | | | Product Details: | | | Author:
| Marlena de Blasi | | Hardcover:
| 317 pages | | Publisher:
| Algonquin Books | | Publication Date:
| December 21, 2006 | | Package Length:
| 8.4 inches | | Package Width:
| 5.5 inches | | Package Height:
| 1.4 inches | | Package Weight:
| 1.3 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 18 reviews |
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| $5.50 | Used
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- VeryGood | | | $6.27 | Used
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- VeryGood | | | $6.82 | Used
- Mint | | | $6.83 | Used
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| New | |
| $8.27 | New | | | $8.28 | New | | | $8.40 | New | | | $9.70 | New | | | $32.67 | New | |
| Used | |
| $5.50 | Used
- Good | | | $5.59 | Used
- Good | | | $5.59 | Used
- VeryGood | | | $6.27 | Used
- VeryGood | | | $6.27 | Used
- VeryGood | | | $6.82 | Used
- Mint | | | $6.83 | Used
- Mint | | | $8.95 | Used
- Mint | | | $9.62 | Used
- VeryGood | |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
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Stop it, Marlena -- you're making me jealousAug 03, 2010 ** spoiler alert ** An okay travel memoir, with vibrant descriptions of the Italian landscapes, the food and the people. I tried one of the recipes in the back of the book -- walnut foccacia -- and it came out pretty good as well.
I only have two major complaints.
1) It was too long. The book reads more like a series of vignettes than one story. She could have stopped after about 250 pages, instead of dragging it out to more than 300.
2) Because the book is too long, you get sick of her charmed life...more An okay travel memoir, with vibrant descriptions of the Italian landscapes, the food and the people. I tried one of the recipes in the back of the book -- walnut foccacia -- and it came out pretty good as well.
I only have two major complaints.
1) It was too long. The book reads more like a series of vignettes than one story. She could have stopped after about 250 pages, instead of dragging it out to more than 300.
2) Because the book is too long, you get sick of her charmed life after a while. Marlena's biggest problem is adjusting to a new town while she's waiting for her house to be renovated -- and even then, she seems to get along with the locals just fine. Marlena: I'm glad you're in Italy with your true love, meeting interesting rustics, living in ballroom and gorging yourself on good food. But I'm stuck in Georgia. So stop rubbing it in.
the lady in the palazzoMay 29, 2009 WONDERFUL book !! All of Marlena De Blasi's books are excellent, especially the first one - 1000 Days In Venice.
Any who enjoys a love story, a true story, is interested in Italy, its people and its food will LOVE these books.
4 of 5 found the following review helpful:
Minority OpinionNov 15, 2008 I bought this book last month (October 2008), while on my 5th visit to Orvieto. I was hoping for an insightful portrait of Orvieto, a place for which I have enormous regard. Unfortunately, this book is primarily about Ms. De Blasi, not about Orvieto. I find her writing style to be self-consciously florid, almost equivalent to "reading" a Thomas Kinkade painting. I also found somewhat disconcerting her assumption that the reader (I!) should know of her past, i.e., that I should have read her previous books. I also don't care for her somewhat sophomoric philosophizing. I should admit: I am not a fan of this genre, but at least Peter Mayles had a certain ability to evoke a sense of place without making himself the center of the story.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Mediocre writing, but a solid story about Umbria nonthelessAug 04, 2008 When I travel, I enjoy reading novels about the place I'm going to - it adds an extra dimension to all of the new sights and cities. To this end The Lady in the Palazzo was a good book to read about Umbria, with lots of fun anecdotes about the towns and culture of the region. However the writing is run-of-the-mill and at times awkward. For example, in the middle of the book two chapters are devoted to the back stories of the novel's supporting characters. While flashbacks like this can be an interesting literary device, these chapters seemed like they were just randomly and clumsily pasted into the middle of the novel. What's more, the books finale seemed like it was more for the author's benefit than for the readers (I won't spoil it).
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
The Lady in the Palazzo: At Home in UmbriaDec 28, 2007 A fabulously well written story of their continuing adventures of living in Italy. Her observations of the idiocyncracies of the villages of Tuscany and Umbria are close to the mark and full of humor and "stranger in a strange land" frustration and successes.It is as lovely as her first book about Venice and meeting Fernando, and the recipes are the next thing I will want to try. Marlena gets better and better.
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