Charles Dickens, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Donna Leon
Donna Leon
Donna Leon
Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Donna Leon
Erich Hackl
Hugo Loetscher
Tomi Ungerer, Daniel Kampa (Hg.), Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Donna Leon
Astrid Rosenfeld
Tatjana Hauptmann, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Liaty Pisani
Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Lukas Hartmann, Tatjana Hauptmann, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Doris Dörrie
Martin Suter
Martin Suter
Erich Hackl
Slawomir Mrozek
Slawomir Mrozek
Petros Markaris
Lukas Hartmann
Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman
Erich Hackl
Peter Urban (Hg.)
Petros Markaris
Claus-Ulrich Bielefeld, Bielefeld & Hartlieb, Petra Hartlieb
Erich Hackl
Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Andrzej Szczypiorski
Brunetti has always regarded abduction as the most horrible of crimes, not only because he has two children of his own, but also because he is scandalised by the thought that a life may depend on an arbitrary ransom, a life which may be simply extinguished if the price is not paid. In a small village at the foot of the Italian Dolomites the gardens of a deserted farmhouse have lain untouched for decades. But the new owner, keen for renovations to begin, is summoned urgently to the house when his workmen disturb a macabre grave. The coat-of-arms on the dead man’s ring leads to a rich and influential Venetian family, whose only son has been missing for some time. The father was only too willing to pay the ransom when his son was abducted, but the kidnappers had disappeared into thin air. Is there more behind it than just another kidnapping? Brunetti gets out the files and digs deeper than the body was buried. The motives of the action are not always as noble as the lineage the characters are descended from. And things are not always as idyllic as they are in the Brunetti family.
»In her detective novels with Commissario Brunetti, Donna Leon can paralyse the reader with a joyful suspense, lost in the environs of Venice and hopelessly in love with her central character and his wife.«Mail on Sunday
»The marvel of this book is that almost every detail on every page forms part of a succession of clues, planted with exquisite precision, to unravelling the mystery.«Sunday Times
»Leon gets better and better.« Express on Sunday
»Goes a long way to confirming Donna Leon’s claim to have taken literary possession of Venice... ›A Noble Radiance‹ finds her at the height of her power.« Independent on Sunday