The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, 1725-1798. Volume 07: Venice
Welcome back to the whirlwind life of Giacomo Casanova. If you thought his earlier memoirs were packed with adventure, Volume 7 turns the tension up to eleven. This isn't a grand tour of European courts; it's a heart-pounding homecoming where the welcome mat has been replaced with a warrant.
The Story
The book opens with Casanova, now a man in his thirties with a continent's worth of notoriety, deciding to risk everything to see Venice again. He's homesick, but he's also broke and looking for opportunity. Using a fake name and a borrowed title, he slips back into the city. For a while, he thrives, charming his way into high society, throwing parties, and of course, pursuing beautiful companions. But Venice in the 1750s is a police state run by the feared Council of Ten. Casanova's loud, flashy lifestyle—his gambling, his writings, his very public affairs—is a red flag to the austere Inquisitors who see him as a corrupting influence. The second half of the book is a masterclass in suspense as the net slowly closes around him. Informants whisper, letters are intercepted, and every friendly face might be a spy. The glamorous parties suddenly feel like traps, and the familiar canals become potential routes to a dank prison cell.
Why You Should Read It
This volume completely reframes Casanova. Yes, the romantic escapades are here (and they are often hilarious), but they're background noise to the main event: survival. You see his brilliant mind at work, not in seduction, but in strategy and paranoia. His observations of Venetian society are razor-sharp. He shows us the hypocrisy of the nobility who publicly shun him but privately invite him to their salons for entertainment. The real thrill isn't in whether he gets the girl, but in whether he can outsmart the most powerful police force in Italy. It makes him deeply human—vulnerable, afraid, and desperately clever.
Final Verdict
If you love historical drama with the pace of a thriller, this is your book. It's perfect for anyone who enjoys stories about underdogs, flawed heroes, or fascinating slices of social history. You don't need to have read the earlier volumes to jump right in. Just be ready for a ride through Venice's golden age, seen from the perspective of a man dancing on the edge of a dagger. It's a story about the price of freedom and the irresistible pull of home, even when home wants to lock you up.
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