Perfect Light

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Perfect Light
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Marcello Fois
Translated by Silvester Mazzarella
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:352
Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 130
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
Historical fiction
ISBN/Barcode 9780857056757
ClassificationsDewey:853.92
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Quercus Publishing
Imprint MacLehose Press
Publication Date 9 January 2020
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Cristian is enterprising and determined. Maddalena is tenacious and quite able to imagine - and defend - her own future. Cristian and Maddalena have always known each other, and if fate had not gone awry they might already be married. But between them, exactly in the middle, there is Domenico: Cristian's childhood friend who has grown up alongside him like a brother. And when Cristian succumbs to the fate of the Chironis - that curse of illnesses, murders and suicides that has blighted his family over the years - it is Domenico that Maddalena marries. Taking his trilogy of the Chironi family up to the present day, Marcello Fois has woven a delicately detailed story, full of dormant passions, plot twists, betrayals and reconciliations. The epic scope and the dramatic tension of his writing means that while his trilogy might be the story of one family on a tiny island, it has a universality, a humanity and a power to speak to anyone of us.

Author Biography

Marcello Fois was born in Sardinia in 1960 and is one of a gifted group of writers called 'Group 13', who explore the cultural roots of their various regions. He writes for the theatre, television and cinema, and is the author several novels, including The Advocate, Memory of the Abyss, Bloodlines and The Time in Between.

Reviews

"It is a long time since I last came across a writer with such a deep, poetic sense of nature and the ability to convey it" With a stubborn grace, Fois interrogates the modern world without ever losing his sense of the past - La Stampa