The Art of Falling

The Art of Falling

by Deborah Lawrenson (Author)

Synopsis

In 1944 Tom Wainwright, a British soldier, arrives in the small Italian town of Petriano. The war is nearly over, and in the lull before the Allied troops move further north to capture Florence Tom forges a friendship with the Parini family - and in particular with the eldest daughter, Giuliana. When the war ends he chooses to stay in Italy, planning to build a life with the woman with whom he has fallen deeply in love, but in the chaotic, tragic fallout of the end of the Second World War his hopes are dashed. Fifty years later Isabel Wainwright, Tom's daughter, sets off for Petriano herself, to attend a ceremony naming a piazza in her father's honour. But Isabel isn't so much going to represent her father as to try and find him - for she and her mother have heard nothing of him since, nearly twenty years earlier, he went out one day and never returned. She doesn't even know whether her father is dead or alive, but hopes that by discovering something of his past, she can build a picture of the man she hardly knew.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Edition: 1st Arrow Book Edition
Publisher: Arrow
Published: 07 Jul 2005

ISBN 10: 0099481898
ISBN 13: 9780099481898
Book Overview: A romantic historical novel about love and identity, set simultaneously in modern day Tuscany and in an Italy ravaged by World War Two. A sweeping wartime love story that is a must-buy for fans of Captain Corelli's Mandolin and Birdsong.

Media Reviews
A superbly crafted novel that deserves to be called the new Captain Corelli or perhaps the new Birdsong...Moving, elegiac and lyrical * Daily Mail *
This is a most wonderful novel. Evocative and haunting - it will keep you enthralled and intrigued right to the end -- Amazon.co.uk reader review
A real treat to enjoy, best washed down with a big glass of Chianti and bucket of olives -- Amazon.co.uk reader review
The scenes in the Italian countryside are beautifully written and the psychology of the characters are absolutely convincing. I was moved to tears -- Amazon.co.uk reader review
A gracefully written narrative, ideal for those interested in knowing the Vietnam story and looking for a measured analysis of these still hotly contested events -- Howard Jones * University of Albama *
Author Bio
After graduating from Trinity College, Cambridge, Deborah Lawrenson worked as a journalist on the Kentish Times, the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday. She was also the London Section editor of Woman's Journal magazine. She has written three previous novels: The Moonbathers (1998) and the newspaper satires Hot Gossip (1994) and Idol Chatter (1995).