book data
9,375 ratings,
3.67
average rating, 1,188 reviews
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published
2004
by Lübbe
(first published 2003)
details
Gebundene Ausgabe, 507 pages
characters
setting
isbn
3785715501
(isbn13: 9783785715505)
description
Sarah Dunant's gorgeous and mesmerizing novel, Birth of Venus, draws readers into a turbulent 15th-century Florence, a time when the lavish city, stee…more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 12,170)
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5 stars (1943)
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1 star (206)
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avg 3.67
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
I'm bothered by people who believe in reincarnation and were always someone important in their past lives... everyone was Cleopatra, no one was a five-penny hooker in Capetown. This book rubbed me the same wrong way.
Set during the just-post Medici era in Florence, during the rise and eventual fall of their rabid-puritanical monk/dictator, the history and period detail of the book are fascinating. We watch a lovely city of art and learning collapse into a city of fear and authoritarianism ...more
Set during the just-post Medici era in Florence, during the rise and eventual fall of their rabid-puritanical monk/dictator, the history and period detail of the book are fascinating. We watch a lovely city of art and learning collapse into a city of fear and authoritarianism ...more
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Read in June, 2005
Wow, I really enjoyed this book. I read it in a day. I didn't read it like I read Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix nor did I read it like I plan to read Book 6 on July 16, but I read it in a day it was that good. I'm just going to address my one major problem with the book before I go on to tell you exactly why I liked it so much.
Language. I don't know how they spoke in the 1490s, but some of the language seemed very current. Some of the slang used to describe various body p...more
Language. I don't know how they spoke in the 1490s, but some of the language seemed very current. Some of the slang used to describe various body p...more
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(6 people liked it)
8 comments
Read in September, 2007
For some reason, I always feel the need to apologize when giving a high rating to a book that is not marvelously written from a technical standpoint--I think I've been privy to too many technical writing conversations. While this book is not a classic of literary style, it was a very good read. Its strengths rest in its emotional honesty at difficult moments. Dunant has an eye for those small defining gestures that convey volumes.
As a historical novel, it also covers some interesti...more
As a historical novel, it also covers some interesti...more
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Read in January, 2005
A friend gave me this book as a birthday gift. Oddly, it was a book she'd never even read (and she's an even more avid reader than I am). She just indicated that she'd thought it looked like a good one, and as it was a "bestseller" she figured it must be. She wasn't wrong, however, for the first few chapters, I constantly wondered why on earth she'd pick out such a book (with such content) for me...
After convincing myself I was an adult and it was ok to continue (I still h...more
After convincing myself I was an adult and it was ok to continue (I still h...more
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1 comment
Read in April, 2007
With an overpowering deluge of verbs and a merciless amount of description, only surpassed by Tolkien taking 60 pages to walk around a mountain, I found myself continually drifting off. The novel has a meticulous feel to it, with robotic research covered by a light skein of unbelieveable emotion and a pseudo-attempt at mystery that is all gunked up. Like many books published by large corporations its inherent shallowness and malleability would make a great movie.
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This is an absolutely amazing book. The author has done a lot of research and it shows in her writing. This is a historical fiction. The imagery is wonderful and you really get wrapped up in the lives of the Character. Now that I have been studying Mythology I would like to read it again and see what mythic images I can get from it based on Botticelli's painting.
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Read in January, 2008
recommended to Rebecca by:
Costco book tablerecommends it for: "people who want to hit themselves in the head with boards"- cousin Jared
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
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4 comments
Read in May, 2008
recommended to Kelly by:
Yukirecommends it for: anyone interested in historical fiction or art history
Ideas expressed/message/plot: Alessandra is an intelligent & talented young woman living in Florence during the Renaissance. She doesn't have too many options though - get married or join a convent. While she must to conform to the rules of society, she figures out a way to succumb to her own passion as well.
The book's prologue is truly one of the best openings to a story that I've ever read. After that, I found myself "slowed down," by the references to artists and art...more
The book's prologue is truly one of the best openings to a story that I've ever read. After that, I found myself "slowed down," by the references to artists and art...more
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Read in September, 2008
This is a book that starts with an ending: the death of an elderly nun in a 15th century Italian convent. A mystery is sparked when it is discovered that the nun’s tumor appears to have been faked and she has an evocative tattoo entwining her torso where it has been hidden by her habit.
From there the story vaults to the beginning - to when this mysterious nun was a 14 year old Florentine named Alessandra. Alessandra is presented as the youngest daughter of a rich cloth merchan...more
From there the story vaults to the beginning - to when this mysterious nun was a 14 year old Florentine named Alessandra. Alessandra is presented as the youngest daughter of a rich cloth merchan...more
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Read in April, 2008
This book was loaned to me by Karen Y., and I really enjoyed it (thanks Karen!) I like well-written historical fiction, because it gives me a glimpse into a historical time period without having to read a detailed, dry history book. This book did just that. It is set during the Italian Renaissance, which is a time period that admittedly I know little about. The cultural and political events of that time period are seen through the eyes of young girl, Alessandra, who is trying to figure out he...more
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Read in September, 2007
This book takes place in 15th Century Florence. Alessandra Cecchi is a brash 16 year-old who is well studied and enjoys painting and drawing, 2 things not looked well upon young women of the time. As the era of Savonarola begins in Florence, Alessandra is married off to a wealthy Florentine, who in exchange for her freedom to study and paint must respect the freedom he needs. At the same time she is drawn to the painter her father has hired to paint their family chapel and has a strong desire...more
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Dunant does a wonderful job blending historical events in with her fictional character, the blossoming young woman, Alessandra Cecchi. Alessandra is the daughter of a cloth merchant who endures, above all, corrupt religious leaders and an interesting marriage. Through Dunant's vivid descriptions of the time period , readers are transported to late 15th century Florence. The details given to the reader displayed Dunant's erudition and thorough knowledge of that time period. During the course of t...more
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Read in December, 2008
A few points about this book:
If you choose to read it, skip the Prologue. It gives away the last quarter of the book. (I found this very frustrating.)
The middle of the book is fine. It's basic historical romance stuff with interesting, smart characters.
The end of this book sucks. The main character, and her best friend, make decisions which are both odd and unbelievable.
Perhaps you should skip the prologue, read the middle, then when you get to...more
If you choose to read it, skip the Prologue. It gives away the last quarter of the book. (I found this very frustrating.)
The middle of the book is fine. It's basic historical romance stuff with interesting, smart characters.
The end of this book sucks. The main character, and her best friend, make decisions which are both odd and unbelievable.
Perhaps you should skip the prologue, read the middle, then when you get to...more
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1 comment
Read in November, 2004
recommends it for:
Everyone
The Birth of Venus by Sarah Dunant tells the story of a young woman in Florence in the late 1400s. She is well-educated and an artist which is unusual for women in that time. Her desire is to be alone to study and draw but societal conventions and her family’s position determine that her fate be either marriage or the convent. When Florence is threatened by the French army, she is forced
to make a quick decision on her future.
With the invasion looming, the city’s clergy is ...more
to make a quick decision on her future.
With the invasion looming, the city’s clergy is ...more
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Read in March, 2008
I read this title for a book club and from the description, I thought it would make for a very good discussion. Unfortunately, the story did not live up to the expectations created by the inside flap.
If you like historical fiction, it does have a fairly interesting depiction of Renaissance Florence going for it--and I did learn some things along the way, like I usually do with good historial fiction. However, without giving too much away, the ending and the character development grea...more
If you like historical fiction, it does have a fairly interesting depiction of Renaissance Florence going for it--and I did learn some things along the way, like I usually do with good historial fiction. However, without giving too much away, the ending and the character development grea...more
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Read in November, 2007
I chose to read this book for its descriptions of Florence, which was one of my favorite cities on my one-time tour of Italy. As expected, the book was full of descriptions of Renaissance art, and of course there was the central story of forbidden love. I was delighted to find politics, theology, epidemiology and a bit of folk-medicine also woven into the story. For someone like me, with a relative deficit in knowledge of the history of art and Europe in general, this was a fun way to learn n...more
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recommends it for:
lovers of art and Italian history
Again, a book that I read before leaving for Peace Corps and by which I was pleasantly surprised. It's the story of the life and love affairs (most importantly with art and one young artist) of Alessandra Cecchi, a citizen of 15th century Florence. From childhood in a wealthy Florentine family to womanhood as the wife of one man and the lover of another and always a passionate lover of art, Alessandra navigates the rapidly changing times with humor and beauty. Dunant has written a number of b...more
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Read in September, 2008
I am surprised that I really liked this book. I didn't like some of the romance stuff and I didn't get the whole snake thing. But, it was very intrigueing to me somehow. I loved that it took place in the 1400's and in Florence, Italy. Maybe because I taught the Middle Ages to Fifth graders for 6 years wrapped me into the story. I loved the huge portion of the story that was about art, religion and politics of the time. I loved that the main character was a sassy, intelligent female. The "...more
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Read in August, 2008
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5 comments
As far as popular historical sagas go, this book is quite an enjoyable, believable, and exciting treat, and is definitely above most novels of the same kind, which generally float amidst all the clichés of bad romance. Dunnant is a gifted storyteller more than a true literary writer, but that serves her very well, for she knows how to keep our interest and how to unfold a dramatic, feverish plot without ever losing control or falling into the usual traps. Her complex story, set under the reign ...more
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