This is Trezza Azzopardi’s debut
novel, shortlisted for The Booker Prize in 2000. Set in the Maltese community of 1960s Cardiff
the story is about the Gauci family, Frank and Mary and their six
daughters. Although there are multiple
viewpoints, most of the story is told through the eyes of the youngest
daughter, five year old Dolores. Life is
tough, the family are poor and Frank is a gambler with a violent temper. The family learn to survive any way they can.
It is a story about migration, acceptance and sibling relationships. The book is in two parts – part one is about the
events in Dolores’s early childhood, where the author paints a realistic
picture of a world seen through the eyes of a child. Part two is about the sisters reuniting for
the funeral of their mother thirty years later.
Dolores is driven by the need to fit in, to know her story and to
belong. The sibling rivalry is still
there even after thirty years and we see the sisters recalling events from
their early childhood showing how the interpretation of a five year old is different
to that of an older child. Yet, their
memories are a bond that ties them, despite their years apart. I like stories about families, particularly
sisters. It is a gritty read, but even
though it is dark, I didn’t find it depressing.
I thoroughly enjoyed it and will be looking out for other novels by the
same author.
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