© 2002-2017 Italian-mysteries.com
NON-FICTION
Set in Italy

Perugia
Candace Dempsey
 Murder in Italy

Rome
Angela K. Nickerson
 A Journey into
  Michelangelo's Rome

FLORENCE
Douglas Preston & Mario Spezi
 The Monster of Florence
VENICE
John Berendt
 The City of Falling Angels
Toni Sepeda
 
Brunetti's Venice
   Walking Through the Novels

Roberta Pianaro
 
At Table with Brunetti
   A Taste of Venice

ART HISTORY
Jonathan Harr
 The Lost Painting
Vatican

Lucien Gregoire
 Murder in the Vatican

John Cornwell
 A Thief in the Night

Family Roots
Frank Viviano
 Blood Washes Blood

World War II
Eric Newby
 Love and War in the Appennines

Memoirs &Travel Essays
Eric Newby
 A Small Place in Italy
Eric Newby
 On the Shores of the Mediterranean
Marlena De Blasi
 A Thousand Days in Venice
 A Thousand Days in Tuscany
Frances Mayes
 Under the Tuscan Sun
Paula Weideger
 Venetian Dreaming

Renaissance History
Timothy Holme
 
Vile Florentines

Set in Rome (Lazio)
Recanati (Marche)
London, Edinburgh, Dublin
 ©2005


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BIO

JONATHAN HARR is the author of the national bestseller A Civil Action, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction. He is a former staff writer at the New England Monthly and has written for The New Yorker and The New York Times Magazine. He lives and works in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he has taught nonfiction writing at Smith College.

Jonathan Harr

The Lost Painting

The Quest for a Caravaggio Masterpiece

JACKET NOTES:  An Italian village on a hilltop near the Adriatic coast, a decaying palazzo facing the sea, and in the basement, cobwebbed and dusty, lit by a single bulb, an archive unknown to scholars. Here, a young graduate student from Rome, Francesca Cappelletti, makes a discovery that inspires a search for a work of art of incalculable value, a painting lost for almost two centuries.

The artist was Caravaggio, a master of the Italian Baroque. He was a genius, a revolutionary painter, and a man beset by personal demons. Four hundred years ago, he drank and brawled in the taverns and streets of Rome, moving from one rooming house to another, constantly in and out of jail, all the while painting works of transcendent emotional and visual power. He rose from obscurity to fame and wealth, but success didn’t alter his violent temperament. His rage finally led him to commit murder, forcing him to flee Rome a hunted man. He died young, alone, and under strange circumstances.

Caravaggio scholars estimate that between sixty and eighty of his works are in existence today. Many others–no one knows the precise number–have been lost to time. Somewhere, surely, a masterpiece lies forgotten in a storeroom, or in a small parish church, or hanging above a fireplace, mistaken for a mere copy.

Prizewinning author Jonathan Harr embarks on an spellbinding journey to discover the long-lost painting known as The Taking of Christ–its mysterious fate and the circumstances of its disappearance have captivated Caravaggio devotees for years. After Francesca Cappelletti stumbles across a clue in that dusty archive, she tracks the painting across a continent and hundreds of years of history. But it is not until she meets Sergio Benedetti, an art restorer working in Ireland, that she finally manages to assemble all the pieces of the puzzle.

Told with consummate skill by the writer of the bestselling, award-winning A Civil Action, The Lost Painting is a remarkable synthesis of history and detective story. The fascinating details of Caravaggio’s strange, turbulent career and the astonishing beauty of his work come to life in these pages. Harr’s account is not unlike a Caravaggio painting: vivid, deftly wrought, and enthralling.
(© Random House)


CARAVAGGIO, THE TAKING OF CHRIST