2.5
The Apothecary's Shop
ByPublisher Description
“An extraordinary book, a gripping trip back through time to discover a different but still unique Venice and its political intrigues and mysteries” (Art as a Part of Culture).
In a medieval Venice ravaged by famine and orgiastic revelries, the protagonists of The Apothecary’s Shop explore the depths of the city and the paths to the supernatural in their search for a missing child.
The young Costanza, of the noble Grimani family, has disappeared. Edgardo, the family scribe, vows to return the girl to her family, an ambitious enterprise considering his failing eyesight. Physical ailments and emotional torment hinder Edgardo’s search, for as he undertakes this perilous investigation, images of his own lost love—Kallis, a slave from the Far East who disappeared in a storm years ago—are resurrected. Help arrives in the form of Abella, the only female doctor in Venice. From her, Edgardo learns of occult medical practices and of Sabbatai’s Apothecary, where the city’s most desperate citizens seek heretical remedies and concoctions to sooth their suffering. It is here, however, where the secret of Constanza’s disappearance may lie.
Venal physicians and legitimate healers, unscrupulous relatives, mystics and apothecaries, wealthy nobility and the wretched poor, undertakers, Eastern merchants, African slave traders, each plays a role this ingeniously constructed mystery set in the busy and licentious trade port of Venice.
“Nobody writes about Venice like Roberto Tiraboschi in The Apothecary’s Shop.” —L’Unità
“An extremely elegant intrigue, with cosmopolitan influences that reflect the character of the city, several unlikely plot twists, and the panache to put just enough confidence in the mind of the reader to keep the pages turning quickly.” —Seattle Review of Books
In a medieval Venice ravaged by famine and orgiastic revelries, the protagonists of The Apothecary’s Shop explore the depths of the city and the paths to the supernatural in their search for a missing child.
The young Costanza, of the noble Grimani family, has disappeared. Edgardo, the family scribe, vows to return the girl to her family, an ambitious enterprise considering his failing eyesight. Physical ailments and emotional torment hinder Edgardo’s search, for as he undertakes this perilous investigation, images of his own lost love—Kallis, a slave from the Far East who disappeared in a storm years ago—are resurrected. Help arrives in the form of Abella, the only female doctor in Venice. From her, Edgardo learns of occult medical practices and of Sabbatai’s Apothecary, where the city’s most desperate citizens seek heretical remedies and concoctions to sooth their suffering. It is here, however, where the secret of Constanza’s disappearance may lie.
Venal physicians and legitimate healers, unscrupulous relatives, mystics and apothecaries, wealthy nobility and the wretched poor, undertakers, Eastern merchants, African slave traders, each plays a role this ingeniously constructed mystery set in the busy and licentious trade port of Venice.
“Nobody writes about Venice like Roberto Tiraboschi in The Apothecary’s Shop.” —L’Unità
“An extremely elegant intrigue, with cosmopolitan influences that reflect the character of the city, several unlikely plot twists, and the panache to put just enough confidence in the mind of the reader to keep the pages turning quickly.” —Seattle Review of Books
Download the free Fable app

Stay organized
Keep track of what you’re reading, what you’ve finished, and what’s next.
Build a better TBR
Swipe, skip, and save with our smart list-building tool
Rate and review
Share your take with other readers with half stars, emojis, and tags
Curate your feed
Meet readers like you in the Fable For You feed, designed to build bookish communities5 Reviews
2.5

Dr. Melody Ann Ross
Created about 5 years agoShare
Report
“This was HORRENDOUS. The translation is indeed a translation, and it completely loses the flow of what is a pretty pathetic story anyway. Sudden modern turns of phrase leave you puzzled at the stumbling pace. Summary: idiotic, unsatisfying deus ex machinas over and over, characters out of the blue who make ZERO sense, and a 5-paragraph description of a vaginal exam written by a man who has maayyyybe seen a vagina, but probably only read about them.”

Tammy Tancredi
Created about 5 years agoShare
Report

Nell Beaudry
Created almost 7 years agoShare
Report
“I'm very frustrated by The Apothecary's Shop. It was a well-constructed mystery, with occasional flashes of brilliance. The prose had moments of luminous description, and the characters were frequently intriguing. But the translation (I assume this is an issue with the translation based on the lavish prose for the source text) felt clunky in certain areas. There's a vulgarity to the text that often felt superfluous. Edgardo and Abella were interesting but felt rather two-dimensional. The mystery itself had a surprising ending that I only guessed a page or two before the grand reveal, but there were other, minor surprises that felt less surprising and that I had guessed well beforehand.
Honestly, the novel generally felt a bit clunky and confusing, with certain things only superficially and barely explained despite their repeated mention (ie. what happened with Kallis twelve years ago? What exactly went on in Edgardo's past?) which made the read feel a bit unfulfilling.
Totally worth it for the occasional lovely description, but not ridiculously compelling.”

Wendy
Created about 7 years agoShare
Report

Terri
Created about 7 years agoShare
Report
About Roberto Tiraboschi
Roberto Tiraboschi was born in Bergamo, Italy. He is known as one of Italy's most stylish screenwriters and playwrights. His novels have enjoyed success with both critics and readers. The Eye Stone was the first of his novels to be published in English.Katherine Gregor translates from Italian, Russian and French. For Europa Editions, she has translated Eva Sleeps by Francesca Melandri and The Eye Stone by Roberto Tiraboschi. She is also a playwright and a fiction writer and maintains a regular blog at scribedoll.wordpress.com.
Start a Book Club
Start a public or private book club with this book on the Fable app today!FAQ
Do I have to buy the ebook to participate in a book club?
Why can’t I buy the ebook on the app?
How is Fable’s reader different from Kindle?
Do you sell physical books too?
Are book clubs free to join on Fable?
How do I start a book club with this book on Fable?