From acclaimed poet and New Yorker writer Cynthia Zarin comes a deeply
personal meditation on two cities, Venice and Rome--each a work of art,
both a monument to the past--and on how love and loss shape places and
spaces.
Here we encounter a writer deeply engaged with narrative in situ--a
traveler moving through beloved streets, sometimes accompanied,
sometimes solo. With her, we see, anew, the Venice Biennale, the Lagoon,
and San Michele, the island of the dead; the Piazza di Spagna, the
Tiber, the view from the Gianicolo; the pigeons at San Marco and the
parrots in the Doria Pamphili. As a poet first and foremost, Zarin's
attention to the smallest details, the loveliest gesture, brings Venice
and Rome vividly to life for the reader.
The sixteenth book in the expanding, renowned ekphrasis series, Two
Cities creates space for these two historic cities to become characters
themselves, their relationship to the writer as real as any love affair.