The Girl of His Dreams
(Libby/OverDrive eAudiobook)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors
Leon, Donna Author
Colacci, David Narrator
Published
Blackstone Publishing , 2008.
Status
Available from Libby/OverDrive

Available Platforms

Libby/OverDrive
Titles may be read via Libby/OverDrive. Libby/OverDrive is a free app that allows users to borrow and read digital media from their local library, including ebooks, audiobooks, and magazines. Users can access Libby/OverDrive through the Libby/OverDrive app or online. The app is available for Android and iOS devices.

Description

When a friend of Commissario Guido Brunetti's brother, a priest recently returned from years of missionary work in Africa, calls on the Commissario with a request, Brunetti suspects the man has hidden motives. A new, American-style Christian sect has begun to meet in private homes in the city, and it's possible the priest is merely apprehensive of the competition. But the preacher could also be fleecing his growing flock, so Brunetti and his wife, Paola, along with Inspector Vianello and his wife, go undercover.The investigation has to be put aside, however, when, one cold and rainy morning, the body of a gypsy girl is found floating in a canal. It looks like the girl may have fallen off a nearby roof while fleeing an apartment she had robbed but, inconceivably, no one has reported a missing child or the theft of the gold ring she carries. And when Brunetti ventures out to a gypsy camp on the mainland to inform the parents, the insular community resists his questions, refusing to let him speak with the mother.Like a number of Leon's previous novels, The Girl of His Dreams explores the people and cultures at the margins of Italian life, in this case, the secretive world of the Romani people, scores of thousands of whom exist both inside and outside of society. Haunted by the girl, Brunetti finds himself struggling with both institutional prejudice and entrenched criminality as he attempts to solve the crime.

More Details

Format
eAudiobook
Edition
Unabridged
Street Date
5/13/2008
Language
English
ISBN
9780792755425

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Also in this Series

  • Death at La Fenice (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 1) Cover
  • Death in a strange country (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 2) Cover
  • Dressed for death (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 3) Cover
  • Death and judgment (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 4) Cover
  • Acqua alta (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 5) Cover
  • Quietly in Their Sleep (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 6) Cover
  • A noble radiance (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 7) Cover
  • Fatal remedies (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 8) Cover
  • Friends in high places: a Commissario Guido Brunetti mystery (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 9) Cover
  • A sea of troubles (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 10) Cover
  • Willful behavior (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 11) Cover
  • Uniform justice (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 12) Cover
  • Doctored evidence (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 13) Cover
  • Blood from a stone (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 14) Cover
  • Through a glass, darkly (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 15) Cover
  • Suffer the little children (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 16) Cover
  • The girl of his dreams (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 17) Cover
  • About face (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 18) Cover
  • A question of belief (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 19) Cover
  • Drawing conclusions (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 20) Cover
  • Beastly things (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 21) Cover
  • The golden egg (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 22) Cover
  • By its cover (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 23) Cover
  • Falling in love (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 24) Cover
  • The waters of eternal youth (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 25) Cover
  • Earthly remains (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 26) Cover
  • The temptation of forgiveness (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 27) Cover
  • Unto us a son is given (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 28) Cover
  • Trace elements (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 29) Cover
  • Transient desires (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 30) Cover
  • Give unto others (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 31) Cover
  • So shall you reap (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 32) Cover
  • A refiner's fire (Guido Brunetti mysteries Volume 33) Cover

Other Editions and Formats

Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
The Guido Brunetti and Clare Fergusson mysteries explore the personal and professional lives of the detectives as well as serious social issues. The detectives contemplate the human condition and the nature of crime and criminals and effect justice, legal or not. -- Joyce Saricks
Though Joe Pickett is a Wyoming-based ranger and Guido Brunetti a Venice-based police officer, both series offer complex mysteries (often involving government corruption) in vividly depicted settings. The main characters share strong personal values and a sense of integrity. -- Shauna Griffin
Defined by a very strong sense of place -- small-town France in the Bruno Courreges mysteries and Venice, Italy in the Guido Brunetti mysteries -- these tales offer a leisurely pace, complex police protagonists, and rich detail. -- Mike Nilsson
Readers looking for police procedurals led by likeable, angst-filled detectives stationed in small but famous towns in England (DI Wilkins Mysteries) and Italy (Guido Brunetti Mysteries) will enjoy these atmospheric and intricately plotted series. -- Andrienne Cruz
These police procedural mystery series follow urban inspectors in Turkey (Ikmen) and Venice (Guido) as they solve a wide range of cases. Each series is intricately plotted and has a strong sense of place. -- Jennie Stevens
These leisurely paced police procedural series both focus as much on developing a strong sense of place (Guido Brunetti is set in Venice, Italy, while Darko Dawson works in Accra, Ghana), as they do exploring twisty and complex cases. -- Stephen Ashley
The Guido Brunetti and Adam Dalgleish series offer elegant prose, a strong sense of place, and sharp psychological insights. Sensitive detectives and well-drawn series characters add to these engaging mysteries, and social issues often form the backdrop for the crime. -- Joyce Saricks
Readers looking for leisurely paced police procedurals set in Italy will enjoy the small-town investigations of sarcastic detective Salvo Montalbano and likeable, angsty police superintendent Guido Brunetti. -- Andrienne Cruz
Though the Inspector Chen Cao series tends to be a bit more suspenseful than the more leisurely paced Guido Brunetti books, both twisty police procedural series follow keen-eyed sleuths while building a strong sense of place. -- Stephen Ashley

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
NoveList recommends "DI Wilkins mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Detective Tully Jarsdel mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Joe Pickett novels" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Ashe Cayne novels" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Inspector Chen Cao mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Avraham Avraham mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Adam Dalgliesh mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Inspector Ikmen mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Salvo Montalbano mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Bruno Courreges mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Reverend Clare Fergusson mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Philip Taiwo mysteries" for fans of "Guido Brunetti mysteries". Check out the first book in the series.

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Corruption Italian-style is a dominant theme of mystery writers Lindsey Davis and Donna Leon Although Davis writes about first century Rome and Leon about contemporary Venice. Their stories are filled with historical, geographical, and cultural details, with memorable characters and fascinating background facts. -- Katherine Johnson
Deborah Crombie and Donna Leon write police procedurals with well-developed, multi-dimensional characters and an unhurried pace. Crombie's Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James stories are set in England, while Leon's Guido Brunetti stories take place in Venice, Italy. Both authors evoke a strong sense of locale, atmosphere, and local customs. -- Ellen Guerci
Christobel Kent and Donna Leon set their mysteries in Italy with melancholy men as sleuths who must balance their personal lives with their work. The intricate plots emphasize the psychological aspect of crime and a strong sense of place is created through vivid descriptions of Italy. -- Merle Jacob
Michael Dibdin's Rome-based mysteries will please Donna Leon's fans. Dibdin's detective Zen fights organized crime and more throughout the country, while Leon's Vice-Commissario Brunetti works the region around Venice. Characters are more important than the plot, and both detectives must fight the corruption within and outside of the system. -- Katherine Johnson
It is not only in Italy that honest policemen must fight corruption and incompetence. Stuart M. Kaminsky's Russian police detective, Porfiry Rostnikov, tenaciously counters evils similar to those faced by Leon's Brunetti and enjoys similar satisfaction both in seeing justice served and in his relationships with his family and friends. -- Katherine Johnson
Magdalen Nabb and Donna Leon write intelligent, elegant, character-based mysteries set in Italy. Their lead police detectives are likable, ordinary-seeming men who must deal with official corruption while understanding that human lives may be more important than the actual resolutions to the investigations. -- Katherine Johnson
Readers who appreciate the sense of justice and interplay of life in Donna Leon's mysteries might also enjoy Robert Tanenbaum's Butch Karp/Marlene Ciampi series set in the NYC area. Corruption also abounds here, but family concerns play an important role in these mysteries, just as they do in Leon's. -- Katherine Johnson
Fans of world-weary Italian police detectives trying to combat corruption and solve a murder will enjoy both Andrea Camilleri and Donna Leon. Despite their different settings, the stories and the characters have much in common, including enjoyment of Italian food, as well as vivid descriptions of the locales. -- Katherine Johnson
Georges Simenon's and Donna Leon's mysteries feature a strong sense of place. In their works, a highly competent and thoughtful police official solves crimes as much by thought as action, must also deal with administrative concerns, and enjoys a loving family, contrasted with dysfunctional families they encounter during investigations. -- Katherine Johnson
These authors' works have the appeal factors angst-filled, strong sense of place, and intricately plotted, and they have the genres "police procedurals" and "mysteries"; and the subjects "murder investigation," "detectives," and "police."
These authors' works have the appeal factors strong sense of place and leisurely paced, and they have the genre "police procedurals"; and the subjects "murder investigation," "detectives," and "police."
These authors' works have the appeal factors strong sense of place, leisurely paced, and intricately plotted, and they have the genres "police procedurals" and "mysteries"; the subjects "murder investigation," "detectives," and "police"; and characters that are "flawed characters."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Leon's latest Guido Brunetti novel begins and ends with funerals the first for Brunetti's mother and the second for an 11-year-old gypsy girl whose body washes up in Venice's Grand Canal. As he launches what he knows will be a fruitless investigation of the girl's death, Brunetti is assailed by the ironies of police work in contemporary Italy, where corruption is rampant and where his boss, Patta, king of the bureaucrats, prattles on about multicultural awareness while trying to protect the well-connected from any exposure in the matter of an insignificant gypsy's death. But just as Brunetti is incensed by the way his peers ignore the marginalized members of society, so is he appalled by the callousness with which gypsy fathers groom their young children for lives of petty crime. More and more in Leon's remarkably rich series, crimes have no solutions, and the problems of daily life yield no answers. And yet, as Brunetti reflects on his loss of the capacity for instinctive trust, we feel just that kind of trust in Brunetti himself, in the idea of a man overwhelmed by a malfunctioning society who soldiers on, doing what good work he can and finding solace in small moments of love and tranquility. It isn't much, but in lives bookended by funerals and filled with frustrations, it's what we have. This series becomes less about crime and more about daily life with each new entry, and as it evolves, it becomes clear that Leon deserves her place not only with the finest international crime writers (Michael Dibdin and Henning Mankell, for example) but also with literary novelists who explore the agonies of the everyday (Margaret Drabble and Anne Tyler, among others).--Ott, Bill Copyright 2008 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Library Journal Review

Political reality prevails over justice, and a child's death goes unpunished despite the best efforts of Commissario Guido Brunetti in Leon's 17th Venetian mystery. When 11-year-old Ariana Rocich drowns in a canal and goes unidentified for days, she begins to haunt Brunetti's dreams. But Ariana is a Rom, or gypsy, found with stolen jewelry items secreted in and on her person, a discovery that makes Brunetti's investigation particularly sensitive in the face of new departmental directives regarding multicultural issues. The book opens with the funeral of Brunetti's mother before segueing into a subplot about a religious charlatan; so religion, as well as politics, becomes a topic around the family table for Brunetti, wife Paola, daughter Chiara, and son Raffi. A devoted family man, Brunetti is deeply principled if not overtly religious: his character and moral compass in the face of bureaucracy evoke as much interest as the crimes he sets out to solve. American-born Leon describes her longtime home of Venice lovingly, and the ethical grounding she gives this novel lifts it above the norm. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 1/08.] (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Commissario Guido Brunetti, of the Venetian Questura, pursues a pair of very different cases to equally inconclusive ends. At the gravesite following the funeral of his mother, Guido Brunetti meets Padre Antonin Scallon, a schoolfriend of Brunetti's brother who has been doing missionary work in Africa. Brunetti has never liked Scallon, so he's surprised when the priest asks his help in getting information about Brother Leonardo Mutti, leader of the Children of Jesus Christ. Agreeing to investigate Mutti, Brunetti (Suffer the Little Children, 2007, etc.) ends up spending considerably more time investigating Scallon himself before he's abruptly pulled away from his inquiries by an ugly discovery. A Romany girl is found drowned in the Grand Canal with two pieces of readily identifiable jewelry that didn't belong to her. Because of a lack of cooperation, the mystery of the girl's death looks even more impenetrable than Brunetti's investigation of the two rival preachers. The investigations are linked only by the establishment's hatred and fear of interlopers who threaten its control. By no means a model of plot construction, but as heartfelt and moving as Brunetti's best. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Leon's latest Guido Brunetti novel begins and ends with funerals—the first for Brunetti's mother and the second for an 11-year-old gypsy girl whose body washes up in Venice's Grand Canal. As he launches what he knows will be a fruitless investigation of the girl's death, Brunetti is assailed by the ironies of police work in contemporary Italy, where corruption is rampant and where his boss, Patta, king of the bureaucrats, prattles on about multicultural awareness while trying to protect the well-connected from any exposure in the matter of an insignificant gypsy's death. But just as Brunetti is incensed by the way his peers ignore the marginalized members of society, so is he appalled by the callousness with which gypsy fathers groom their young children for lives of petty crime. More and more in Leon's remarkably rich series, crimes have no solutions, and the problems of daily life yield no answers. And yet, as Brunetti reflects on his loss of the "capacity for instinctive trust," we feel just that kind of trust in Brunetti himself, in the idea of a man overwhelmed by a malfunctioning society who soldiers on, doing what good work he can and finding solace in small moments of love and tranquility. It isn't much, but in lives bookended by funerals and filled with frustrations, it's what we have. This series becomes less about crime and more about daily life with each new entry, and as it evolves, it becomes clear that Leon deserves her place not only with the finest international crime writers (Michael Dibdin and Henning Mankell, for example) but also with literary novelists who explore the agonies of the everyday (Margaret Drabble and Anne Tyler, among others). Copyright 2008 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2008 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

The girl of Commissario Guido Brunetti's dreams is a gypsy found floating facedown in a canal. With a reading group guide. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.
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Library Journal Reviews

Political reality prevails over justice, and a child's death goes unpunished despite the best efforts of Commissario Guido Brunetti in Leon's 17th Venetian mystery. When 11-year-old Ariana Rocich drowns in a canal and goes unidentified for days, she begins to haunt Brunetti's dreams. But Ariana is a Rom, or gypsy, found with stolen jewelry items secreted in and on her person, a discovery that makes Brunetti's investigation particularly sensitive in the face of new departmental directives regarding multicultural issues. The book opens with the funeral of Brunetti's mother before segueing into a subplot about a religious charlatan; so religion, as well as politics, becomes a topic around the family table for Brunetti, wife Paola, daughter Chiara, and son Raffi. A devoted family man, Brunetti is deeply principled if not overtly religious: his character and moral compass in the face of bureaucracy evoke as much interest as the crimes he sets out to solve. American-born Leon describes her longtime home of Venice lovingly, and the ethical grounding she gives this novel lifts it above the norm. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 1/08.]

[Page 64]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Leon, D., & Colacci, D. (2008). The Girl of His Dreams (Unabridged). Blackstone Publishing.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Leon, Donna and David Colacci. 2008. The Girl of His Dreams. Blackstone Publishing.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Leon, Donna and David Colacci. The Girl of His Dreams Blackstone Publishing, 2008.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Leon, D. and Colacci, D. (2008). The girl of his dreams. Unabridged Blackstone Publishing.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Leon, Donna, and David Colacci. The Girl of His Dreams Unabridged, Blackstone Publishing, 2008.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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