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Casanova's Women: The Great Seducer and the Women He Loved

by Judith Summers

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672393,325 (3.75)2
Eighteenth-century Venetian adventurer Giacomo Casanova, history's most famous seducer, talked his way into the beds of more than two hundred women. Charming, brilliant and devastatingly attractive, the compulsive womaniser claimed to like and understand his conquests. But he could also be ruthless, cruel, selfish and dishonest. Who were these women who established Casanova's extraordinary reputation? From the two sisters with whom he had his first sexual experience to the libidinous Venetian nun who defied God in order to sleep with him, from the wealthy widow he tricked out of a fortune to the love of his life, the glamorous and daring Henriette, they all have their story to tell.… (more)
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Not at all a bad book, but I did skip a few chapters. I have read Casanova's memoirs and the chapters I skipped were about women I really was not interested in.
I think this book is well written, in a nice and easy style. It's like reading the memoirs all over again, only the short version.

It's nice to see that some of these women have actually been identified later on. In this book you get some extra background information on them. It really adds to the whole story.

When you red the memoirs you can't help but wonder if he was always telling the truth. It was therefore no surprise to read he'd been telling lies here and there...
Again, a good addition to the whole story.

The edition I read also contained some images, putting faces on the names.
All in all, I would think this is a little more interesting to people who would find the memoirs too long, but still want to know about the man. I found this book nice overall, but not a 'must read', because I had read the memoirs. It's simply an addition, nothing spectacular. ( )
  nicky_too | Dec 2, 2010 |
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Eighteenth-century Venetian adventurer Giacomo Casanova, history's most famous seducer, talked his way into the beds of more than two hundred women. Charming, brilliant and devastatingly attractive, the compulsive womaniser claimed to like and understand his conquests. But he could also be ruthless, cruel, selfish and dishonest. Who were these women who established Casanova's extraordinary reputation? From the two sisters with whom he had his first sexual experience to the libidinous Venetian nun who defied God in order to sleep with him, from the wealthy widow he tricked out of a fortune to the love of his life, the glamorous and daring Henriette, they all have their story to tell.

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