Guido Brunetti Books In Order

Below is the complete list of Donna Leon’s Guido Brunetti books in order. For this series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.

Publication Order of Guido Brunetti Books

  1. Death at La Fenice (1992)
    by Donna Leon
    Death at La Fenice was published in 1992 and is listed as book #1 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  2. Death in a Strange Country (1993)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 1993, Death in a Strange Country is listed as book #2 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  3. The Anonymous Venetian / Dressed for Death (1994)
    by Donna Leon
    The Anonymous Venetian / Dressed for Death is a 1994 release and appears as book #3 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  4. Venetian Reckoning / Death and Judgment (1995)
    by Donna Leon
    In the Guido Brunetti series, Venetian Reckoning / Death and Judgment is book #4 and was published in 1995.
  5. Acqua Alta / Death in High Water (1996)
    by Donna Leon
    Acqua Alta / Death in High Water was first published in 1996; within the Guido Brunetti series, it is listed as book #5.
  6. The Death of Faith / Quietly in Their Sleep (1997)
    by Donna Leon
    The Death of Faith / Quietly in Their Sleep was published in 1997 and is listed as book #6 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  7. A Noble Radiance (1998)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 1998, A Noble Radiance is listed as book #7 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  8. Fatal Remedies (1999)
    by Donna Leon
    Fatal Remedies is a 1999 release and appears as book #8 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  9. Friends in High Places (2000)
    by Donna Leon
    In the Guido Brunetti series, Friends in High Places is book #9 and was published in 2000.
  10. A Sea of Troubles (2001)
    by Donna Leon
    A Sea of Troubles was first published in 2001; within the Guido Brunetti series, it is listed as book #10.
  11. Wilful Behaviour (2002)
    by Donna Leon
    Wilful Behaviour was published in 2002 and is listed as book #11 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  12. Uniform Justice (2003)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 2003, Uniform Justice is listed as book #12 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  13. Doctored Evidence (2004)
    by Donna Leon
    Doctored Evidence is a 2004 release and appears as book #13 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  14. Blood from a Stone (2005)
    by Donna Leon
    In the Guido Brunetti series, Blood from a Stone is book #14 and was published in 2005.
  15. Through a Glass, Darkly (2006)
    by Donna Leon
    Through a Glass, Darkly was first published in 2006; within the Guido Brunetti series, it is listed as book #15.
  16. Suffer the Little Children (2007)
    by Donna Leon
    Suffer the Little Children was published in 2007 and is listed as book #16 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  17. The Girl of His Dreams (2008)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 2008, The Girl of His Dreams is listed as book #17 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  18. About Face (2009)
    by Donna Leon
    About Face is a 2009 release and appears as book #18 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  19. A Question of Belief (2010)
    by Donna Leon
    In the Guido Brunetti series, A Question of Belief is book #19 and was published in 2010.
  20. Drawing Conclusions (2011)
    by Donna Leon
    Drawing Conclusions was first published in 2011; within the Guido Brunetti series, it is listed as book #20.
  21. Beastly Things (2012)
    by Donna Leon
    Beastly Things was published in 2012 and is listed as book #21 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  22. The Golden Egg (2013)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 2013, The Golden Egg is listed as book #22 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  23. By its Cover (2014)
    by Donna Leon
    By its Cover is a 2014 release and appears as book #23 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  24. Falling in Love (2015)
    by Donna Leon
    In the Guido Brunetti series, Falling in Love is book #24 and was published in 2015.
  25. The Waters of Eternal Youth (2016)
    by Donna Leon
    The Waters of Eternal Youth was first published in 2016; within the Guido Brunetti series, it is listed as book #25.
  26. Earthly Remains (2017)
    by Donna Leon
    Earthly Remains was published in 2017 and is listed as book #26 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  27. The Temptation of Forgiveness (2018)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 2018, The Temptation of Forgiveness is listed as book #27 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  28. Unto Us a Son Is Given (2019)
    by Donna Leon
    Unto Us a Son Is Given is a 2019 release and appears as book #28 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  29. Trace Elements (2020)
    by Donna Leon
    In the Guido Brunetti series, Trace Elements is book #29 and was published in 2020.
  30. Transient Desires (2021)
    by Donna Leon
    Transient Desires was first published in 2021; within the Guido Brunetti series, it is listed as book #30.
  31. Give Unto Others (2022)
    by Donna Leon
    Give Unto Others was published in 2022 and is listed as book #31 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  32. So Shall You Reap (2023)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 2023, So Shall You Reap is listed as book #32 in the Guido Brunetti series.
  33. A Refiner’s Fire (2024)
    by Donna Leon
    A Refiner’s Fire is a 2024 release and appears as book #33 in the Guido Brunetti series.

Publication Order of Guido Brunetti Companion Books

  1. Brunetti’s Cookbook (2009)
    (With Roberta Pianaro)
    by Donna Leon
    Brunetti’s Cookbook was published in 2009 and is listed as book #1 in the Guido Brunetti Companion series.
  2. Brunetti’s Venice (2019)
    (With Toni Sepeda)
    by Donna Leon
    Published in 2019, Brunetti’s Venice is listed as book #2 in the Guido Brunetti Companion series.

About Guido Brunetti

Donna Leon’s Guido Brunetti series is a long-running Venetian crime sequence built around Commissario Guido Brunetti, a thoughtful police detective working in a city where beauty, decay, privilege, and corruption are inseparable. The series begins with Death at La Fenice, a murder investigation set around Venice’s famous opera house, and immediately establishes the qualities that have made Brunetti such an enduring figure: intelligence, restraint, moral patience, and a deep familiarity with the city’s visible and hidden life.

Brunetti is not a flamboyant detective or a lone avenger. He is a cultured, observant police officer with a strong ethical core, a dry sense of irony, and an awareness that legal justice and moral truth do not always meet. His investigations often begin with murder, suspicious death, disappearance, or fraud, but Leon is rarely interested in crime as spectacle. Each case opens a door into something larger: political influence, environmental damage, domestic abuse, church power, immigration, inherited wealth, art crime, organized exploitation, or the quiet compromises that allow corrupt systems to keep functioning.

Venice is the defining presence of the series. Leon writes the city as a living social organism rather than a scenic backdrop. Canals, bridges, offices, trattorias, palazzi, markets, police headquarters, and private apartments all carry meaning. The city is beautiful, but never treated as innocent. It is crowded with tourists, shaped by old families, burdened by bureaucracy, and vulnerable to moneyed interests that care more about access and appearance than civic responsibility. Brunetti understands Venice because he belongs to it, yet his love for the city makes its failures more painful.

The recurring cast gives the books much of their warmth and continuity. Brunetti’s wife, Paola Falier, is one of the series’ most important figures: a university professor, reader of Henry James, and member of an old Venetian family whose perspective often sharpens Brunetti’s own thinking. Their children, Raffi and Chiara, keep the detective’s domestic life grounded in ordinary concerns, while colleagues such as Ispettore Vianello and the resourceful Signorina Elettra add humor, competence, and quiet resistance inside the Questura. Vice-Questore Patta, with his vanity and political caution, represents the institutional obstacles Brunetti must navigate almost as often as the criminals themselves.

The books are connected by character, setting, and moral atmosphere rather than by one continuous mystery arc. A reader can understand an individual case on its own, but the series gains force through accumulation. Over time, Brunetti’s Venice becomes richer, more compromised, and more intimate. Books such as Death in a Strange Country, Acqua Alta, Friends in High Places, The Girl of His Dreams, Beastly Things, and A Refiner’s Fire show Leon returning to familiar ground while continually finding new pressures within it.

The tone of the Guido Brunetti series is elegant, humane, and quietly severe. Leon does not rely on excessive violence or elaborate twists to hold attention. Her suspense comes from what people hide, what institutions excuse, and what Brunetti can prove in a world where influence often matters more than guilt. The series endures because it offers more than procedural mystery. It is a sustained portrait of a city and a detective trying, case by case, to preserve decency in a place where truth is often known long before it can be acted upon.

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