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Uniform Justice: A Commissario Guido Brunetti Mystery

Uniform Justice: A Commissario Guido Brunetti Mystery

List Price: $34.95
Your Price: $23.07
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Si! Si!
Review: A mystery equal to if not better than Simenon's Inspector Maigret series, UNIFORM JUSTICE lives up to the author's well deserved reputation. Set in modern Venice, it is replete with translatable Italian (telefonino, Carabinieri, Signora, si), well rounded characters and a plot that moves, though a little slowly, with riveting intricacy.
Commissario Brunetti becomes involved with a young cadet's suicide and he finds himself up against a military obstinacy equal to Jack Nicholson's character in A FEW GOOD MEN. This mystery brings the reader into the Italian home, takes you to lunch (yum!) and lets you suffer the frustrations of a modern police officer in a very political world. I couldn't put it down.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Leon's latest is simply fantastic!
Review: Donna Leon's twelfth Commissario Guido Brunetti novel does not begin with a bang; instead, it begins with an apparent suicide, a hanging.

For all intents and purposes, the death of a young cadet at an exclusive Venetian military
school certainly must be a suicide. However, with the intellect, cunning, skill, and savvy of Leon and
Brunetti, what begins with a "simple" death soon works its way into an ugly, complicated, and
frightening murder in Leon's latest "Uniform Justice."

The young teenager is the son of a prominent doctor and politician, termed "honest" by any
standard. The father's honesty serves as a fault, however, and soon causes him to resign from
parliament, particularly following his investigation of corruption in military procurement. The
"web of deceit" in such cases seems to spread just about everywhere. His "anti-military" stance
does not go over well, especially at his son's military school. Thus begins a series of cover-ups, lies,
and deception--the ranks of the involved quickly close.

Not for the first time does Brunetti face the
"old school" of Venice. His task is formidable, but with the help of his wife Paola, his secretary
Signorina Elettra, and a few members of the department, Brunetti methodically and brilliantly
brings the case to its conclusion.

Leon, for all the love she bears for Venice, where she's lived for a
number of years, continues to champion the cause of the just, the honest, the uncorrupt, the
innocent, all descriptives of just about any place but Venice. Still, politics and social injustices
aside, Leon continues to hold firmly her legion of fans with her inimitable style, plot designs, superb
characterizations, and general "good literature." "Uniform Justice" is not easily laid aside until it
is finished.

One of Leon's strong suits is that she does not pretend that, when the final pages are read,
the world is then tied up nicely in a pretty bow and everything is okay. Romanticism in literature is
not Donna Leon; realism is alive and well and these themes permeate her twelve Brunetti novels.
Perhaps this is another reason she is so popular. (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Darker and darker
Review: Donna Leon's twelfth novel is a real murder mystery. And for a reader who dearly loves her earlier books, that is not necessarily a good thing. In UNIFORM JUSTICE, the gloom of winter, a young man's sinister death, a mean-spirited military academy, and the desperation of an honest man in a corrupt system all mix to form the general air of despair that pervades the book. In earlier Brunetti books there are many little rays of sunshine, comforting antidotes to crime and corruption. Yes, Guido Brunetti is always busy solving a nasty murder, but the romance and beauty of Venice; tidbits of Italian culture,art and history; the warmth of the Brunetti's family life; and, how could I forget, the delicious descriptions of Paola Brunetti's Italian cooking offer reminders that life is beautiful.

Not that I'll quit reading Leon! I am waiting in line for the next book(s)! But armchair travelers, beware. This book strays into darker and darker territory. You can still use your map of Venice to figure out where Brunetti is and what he sees,and you can still enjoy Paola's food, but it won't be quite as much fun.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Uniform Justice out of is not Justified
Review: For whatever reason, Donna Leon has become almost hysterically anti-American with every book. Some of her asides about the United States are becoming both tiresome and unneccessary. If she wished to write political commentary books, then do so. But the obvious left-leaning rhetoric is become a bit of a bore as our Brit friends would say. As for the offer for her latest, "No, thanks."

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Uniform Justice out of is not Justified
Review: For whatever reason, Donna Leon has become almost hysterically anti-American with every book. Some of her asides about the United States are becoming both tiresome and unneccessary. If she wished to write political commentary books, then do so. But the obvious left-leaning rhetoric is become a bit of a bore as our Brit friends would say. As for the offer for her latest, "No, thanks."

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Running out of steam... (SPOILER ENCLOSED)
Review: I was rather disappointed by this book. The mystery starts off as rather interesting, but one sees the solution quite early on. What gets very tiresome is the continuous political preaching. Ms Leon is entitled to her opinions, and I do not mind their being mentioned occasionally under the guise of a character's beliefs. But this was really too much: it is supposed to be a mystery, not a political platform.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Difference between European & American mystery
Review: I was told once that the difference between Europeans and Americans was perspective. Americans are optimists ; while Europeans are realists. I submit this novel as evidence.

In this police procedural, a student is discovered dangling from the ceiling in the dormitory shower at an "elite" military school in Venice. All signs point to suicide, but Commissario Brunetti's innate instincts give him reason to question that diagnosis. Thus, author Donna Leon follows Brunetti and his colleagues as they piece together evidence of murder and conspiracy.

Author Leon is acclaimed and well-respected in Europe, having received the Silver Dagger award for fiction in the United Kingdom. She writes well, to say the least. Her main character Brunetti has a heart of gold and a deep cynicism toward Venetian politics and military. His love and other Venetians' love for family is played here against a backdrop of dark hatred and a lust for power that permeates the perpetrators of a young man's murder.

Brunetti despises the military and Italian politicos. He describes a history of government by bribery and power brokers. He shows its toll on everyday Venetians and the deterioration of Venetian society. He holds out little hope for correction of this morass. And in the end, this morass prevents the kind of satisfactory ending that marks most American mysteries. Evil defeats good.

There are some great characters in this book: a police secretary who has the access to information and the ability to analyze it that will make any librarian proud ; a lovable teddy bear of a detective who turns to a beast at the right moment ; a stubborn, highly-principled and grief-stricken father of the victim ; and Brunetti's long-suffering and supportive wife who provides a moral foundation for this novel.

But the humanity of the characters cannot outweigh the fatalistic realism that looms over this novel. Readers of European fiction who do not need a happy ending will enjoy this book for its quality. But American readers accustomed to justice being served will be terribly disappointed.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Harsh reality
Review: One imagines the writer Donna Leon to be like Paola, the Venetian Comisario's wife in "Uniform justice": An aristocratic communist,Italian style. There are No other books that I know of where you have very well crafted mysteries, set in the Venice of Venetians. This is not the honeymoon Venice of singing gondoliers.Leons novels are unflinching in their reality, revealing the corruption and class distinctions in a foggy,damp town over-run with tourists.The graciously human qualities of her detective and the ideosyncratic cast of characters are unique. The bonds of family and community are sesitively drawn and touching. Lovers of Venice will eat up every snippet of Venice itself,the walkways on a quiet winters night,a description of a very Venetian luncheon.
In all these mysteries, you are given all the clues. There is no person who comes in the last scene,or some information not revealed.Despite that, I did not guess the riddle in this installment until the very end, or in any of the other mysteries.Very satisfying.
.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Web of Political Corruption
Review: The military, and political corruption are the targets in Commissario Brunetti's twelfth outing. Once again there is the lovely backdrop of Venice - that city of contradictions, yet it seems with each Brunetti novel Venice as a character is fading more and more. I wish Leon would bring it back to prominence. Although the 'whodunit' here is not difficult to guess, the ending still comes as a surprise. One of the pleasures of the Brunetti novels is in watching the workings of his mind, and how he deals with moral ambiguities, and those ambiguities are at the heart of this novel. Another pleasure is seeing the role his family plays as he solves the puzzle. His wife Paola is as integral to these books as Brunetti himself. The Brunetti novels are way above what one finds in other mysteries these days, and is highly recommended. However, I could have done without the presence of the author's subtle and not so subtle jibes at politics in the United States.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Terrible
Review: This book was so disappointing. Leon writes fairly well but she yearns to write a political commentary more then a murder mystery. In her anti-american/anti-military bias she makes her chararcters look ignorant and provencial. Look elsewhere for a compelling mystery.


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