The House At The Edge Of Night
Material type:
- 9780099592631
- F/ BAN
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Fiction | F/ BAN | Checked out | 17/05/2025 | CA00027233 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
'Ten years ago, my top holiday read was Victoria Hislop's The Island ; this summer's great escape belongs to Catherine Banner.' The Pool
'Delightful ... A captivatin g tale of love ... and loyalty peopled by wonderfully vivid characters.' Sunday Express
'Readers, prepare to be captivated.' Irish Independent
On a tiny island off the coast of Italy, surrounded by the sound of the sea and the scent of bougainvillea, the Esposito family have been running the bar, the House at the Edge of Night, for generations.
Over the course of a century, as the town is transformed by war, fascism, tourism and recession, the spirited Esposito women are determined to keep the doors to the bar open. It is, after all, the place where unexpected friendships are forged, betrayals are discovered and great love affairs begin.
GBP7.99
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
Banner, the author of three YA novels, makes her adult debut with a fantastic chronicle of several generations of a family living on a somewhat otherworldly Italian island. Raised by a kindly doctor who takes him from a Florence orphanage, a grown Amedeo Esposito moves to gossipy Castellamare to become the town physician in the early 20th century. He marries the smart, capable Pina Vella, but not before conducting an ill-fated affair with the mayor's wife, which results in two of Amedeo's children being born to two different women on the same night. After Amedeo loses his livelihood, he and Pina transform their storied, titular home into a successful bar, which is eventually looked after by their youngest child, Maria-Grazia, during WWII. In her role, she becomes privy to all the townspeople's secrets, conducts a courtship with wounded British soldier Robert Carr, and, much to her parents' consternation, finds herself drawn to her half-brother, Andrea. Meanwhile, her sibling Flavio, a former Fascist and her only brother to survive the war, is shunned by the community after rumors destroy his reputation. Banner extends the scope to Maria-Grazia's two disparate, warring sons, Sergio and Giuseppino, who are willed the bar by Amedeo, and Sergio's daughter, Lena, who gives up her plans of becoming a doctor to run the business. All the while, Banner constructs a town life with an engaging cast of characters. Her story has a touch of magical realism that filters down from the island's many legends, collected in a book within the book by Amedeo. Banner deftly touches on weightier themes while weaving an enchanting narrative, the events of which extend to the present. Agent: Suzanne Gluck, WME Entertainment. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.Booklist Review
Banner makes her adult-fiction debut with this moving saga about four generations of an Italian family living on a small, sparsely populated island off the coast of Sicily. The patriarch, Amadeo Esposito, arrives on Castellammare in 1914 to become the island's first doctor. After serving in the Great War, Amadeo returns; marries Pina, the widow of the schoolmaster; and buys the House at the Edge of Night a popular café that fell into disrepair during the war. He and Pina revive the café while raising three sons and a daughter, Maria-Grazia, the intellectual and the strongest traditionalist, who is determined to keep the café going as her parents age. Banner has populated the family's story with a marvelous supporting cast, including the mayor, who turns to fascism; an English deserter who washes up on shore and becomes Maria-Grazia's husband; and their daughter, Lena, who carries the House at the Edge of Night into the twenty-first century. Banner's superbly written drama is rich in engaging characters and the mystical island stories passed on from one generation to the next.--Donovan, Deborah Copyright 2016 BooklistKirkus Book Review
The story of a family-run bar on a tiny island off the coast of Sicily, from 1914 to 2009. This knockout adult debut by young British author Banner (she started writing teen novels at age 14) is guaranteed to draw comparisons to Beautiful Ruins, Cutting for Stone, and The House of the Spirits, whisking us away to a world grounded in both reality and myth, filled with marvelously peculiar characters, plotted on a grand scale. This one begins in the early 20th century with an Italian orphan, Amadeo Esposito, who overcomes his circumstances to study medicine, then answers a call for a physician on the (fictional) island of Castellamare. He arrives just in time for the annual feast for the island's patron saint. The story of Sant'Agata, who saved the island from a plague of sorrows, is told to Amadeo by the beautiful schoolteacher Pina Vella; he adds it to the compendium of stories he collects in a red leather book given him by his foster father. At first, the villagers embrace Amadeo; he marries Pina and has a son. But thanks to past judgment errors of his own and the corrosive effects of the constant flow of gossip in the town, Amadeo is disgraced and removed from his post. To earn a living, he and Pina reopen the bar in the long-neglected House at The Edge of Night; there, three generations of Espositos will serve coffee, rice balls, and limoncellos to locals and visitors. World wars I and II, the Fascist period, and the financial crisis of 2009 all play critical roles in the plot, but so do the folk tales from Amadeo's logbook, reprinted at the start of each section. So you get both this: "In the bar, there was some disagreement over how the trouble had started....Some of the customers maintained that it had begun with two rich Americans, Freddie and Fannie, others that it had started with two brothers named Lehman" and this: "Two brothers were fishermen upon the sea, both very handsome and so alike that nobody could tell them apart, and both very poor." Ah, what fun. Don't miss it. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.