"A Venetian Affair"
-
Andrea Di Robilant

- Editorial Review
"It's hard to imagine a more
romantic real-life story than the
long, forbidden love affair of the
18th-century Venetian nobleman
Andrea Memmo and a half-English
beauty named Giustiniana Wynne.
Andrea Di Robilant's A Venetian
Affair is drawn in part from a cache
of letters discovered by the
author's father in his ancestral
palazzo on the Grand Canal. In 1753,
his ancestor Andrea Memmo had been
introduced to a lovely girl of
uncertain station (illegitimate,
although her parents later married).
The Wynnes's position was precarious
enough in Venice's rigid society,
and Giustiniana's mother took every
step to prevent the young aristocrat
from corrupting her daughter. But
the two lovers began to meet in
secret: exchanging letters through
confederates and communicating in
public through an elaborate code of
nods and gestures. They even came
within a few days of being married
before further dark revelations
about Giustiniana's family put a
permanent end to their hopes.
Although Memmo went on to have an
illustrious career in the dying
Venetian Republic, it is
Giustiniana's astonishing later life
that really captures the reader. A
Venetian Affair provides both a rich
picture of the times--including
cameo appearances by that scamp,
Casanova--and a convincing account
of an enduring passion." --Regina
Marler
Book
Description::
“Some years ago, my father came home
with a carton of old letters that
time and humidity had compacted into
wads of barely legible paper,”
Andrea di Robilant tells us as he
begins this spellbinding true story
of love in eighteenth-century
Venice. In the attic of their old
family palazzo on the Grand Canal,
his father had found the love
letters of their ancestor Andrea
Memmo, one of the last great
Venetian statesmen, to a beautiful
half-English girl named Giustiniana
Wynne. Some of the letters were
written in code, which di Robilant
and his father cracked to reveal an
illicit passion: Giustiniana was not
of the elite ruling class and would
never have been considered a
suitable match for Andrea. But their
acts of devotion were startlingly
brazen. As their courtship unfolds,
they plot elaborate marriage schemes
that offend everyone, arrange secret
trysts in borrowed rooms, cause
trouble for the servants who must
ferry their forbidden
correspondence, and even weather an
unwanted pregnancy, from which
Giustiniana, with her wits and
ingenuity and some crucial
assistance from the infamous
Casanova, emerges unscathed.
Andrea di Robilant, heir to the
lovers’ legacy, captures them in the
twilight of the golden era of
Venice, with forays to the colorful
social circles of London and Paris
along the way. His sparkling,
well-paced narrative evokes the
world of mask-wearing men and ladies
attending Goldoni plays and gambling
at the Ridotto—bringing to life, 250
years later, a tale of unbounded
passion and rich historical
intrigue.
About the Author::
Andrea di Robilant was born in Italy
and educated at Le Rosey and
Columbia University, where he
specialized in international
affairs. He currently lives in Rome
with his wife and two children and
works as a correspondent for the
Italian newspaper La Stampa. This is
his first book.
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