Set in Italy the story opens with Isabel Wainwright as she embarks on a
trip to the town of Petriano. Her
father, Tom Wainwright, arrived in the town in 1944 as a British soldier, just as
the Second World War was coming to an end.
Here he got to know the Parini family and fell in love with their eldest
daughter, Giuliana. It was here that he saved a child’s life from a bombed
building. To honour his heroism the town
want to rename a piazza after him and Isabel goes to Italy to accept the honour
on her father’s behalf. She struggles to
explain to the people who so warmly welcome her that she doesn’t know whether
her father is dead or alive because her father left home twenty years ago, when
she was seventeen, and he hasn’t been heard of since. He went out one day and never came back and
she and her embittered mother, Patricia, have been trying to come to terms with
this fact ever since. Isabel remembers
that her father was infatuated with the Leaning Tower of Pisa so it is here she
goes in the hope of retracing his footsteps and to learn more about him. Here she meets Matteo and falls in love. The book alternates between the point of view
of Isabel in the present and Tom in the past. The descriptions of Italy were magical. A thoroughly enjoyable read.
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Friday Nights by Joanna Trollop
Friday nights have become a
regular meeting time for six women of different ages and from different
backgrounds. The nights were first
started by Eleanor a former senior administrator and now retired with time on
her hands. She chose to live a single
life concentrating on her career and now realises she doesn’t have many
friends. She is an astute observer of
people and spots two lonely single mothers and suggests they meet up for a
drink at her house. As they get to know each other their group
expands. They become friends and learn
to rely on each other. Then Paula, one
of the members of the group, meets a man, Jackson, whom she introduces to her
friends and things are never the same. I
liked the way Joanna Trollop seamlessly flitted between all the different
points of view.
Friday, September 5, 2014
The House at Zaronza by Vanessa Couchman
This is
the first novel by Vanessa Couchman. The
story opens with Rachel Swift who arrives in Corsica to find out more about her
Corsican grandmother, whom she never knew.
While staying at a guesthouse she discovers some passionate love letters
that the proprietor found when he was restoring the house. The
letters are unsigned and simply addressed to Maria. They captivate Rachel’s imagination and, in
her quest to find more, she ends up meeting an old woman who gives her Maria’s
memoir to read. The story is then Maria’s as the reader is
taken on the journey of her life from the confines of a strict bourgeois family
to France and the horrors of WW1, where she nurses the wounded. There is a strong sense of place in Vanessa’s
writing, which I loved. The descriptions
of Corsica are beautiful. I’m very much looking forward to reading Vanessa’s next
book.
Thursday, September 4, 2014
The Memory Keeper's Daughter by Kim Edwards
The
Memory Keeper’s Daughter is about the consequences of one action and the effect
that it will have on many lives. The
story starts in 1964 with Dr David Henry forced to deliver his wife’s baby as
the obstetrician is unavailable. Dr David
Henry is a specialist in bone and joint surgery, but with the help of his
colleague, nurse Gill, he knows he can deliver his baby safely. But
what he doesn’t know is that his wife, Norah, is expecting twins. David’s son Paul is born a healthy boy. At this point Norah is exhausted and doesn’t
know what is happening. He delivers the
second baby, a girl. It is obvious to Dr
Henry that she has Down’s syndrome. He instructs
nurse Gill to take his daughter to a home where she can be brought up. When his wife wakes he tells her that she had
twins, but the little girl died. This
one action will haunt David for the rest of his life. The story unfolds following the lives of
David, Norah, Caroline Gill and the two children Paul and Phoebe. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it for the second time.
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