Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Viva Italia!

Like Jenclair and Iliana, I've just read Carol Goodman's newest, The Sonnet Lover. I really enjoy her academic romantic suspense novels - they are great fun. This one is set in Italy and as I read, I was strongly reminded of two others set in Italy which I've read in the past year or so. Barbara Michaels, queen of romantic suspense, wrote The Grey Beginning in 1984, although I read it only a few weeks ago. And another of my favourites, Susanna Kearsley, wrote Season of Storms in 2001 (she has another, The Winter Sea, coming out in March 2008, yay!) So, a little about each very enjoyable story:

The Sonnet Lover / Carol Goodman

Professor Rose Asher is drawn in to a web of deceit when she witnesses the assumed suicide of top student Robin Weiss. Robin had given her information which hinted at the existence of a lost sonnet written by Shakespeare to his Dark Lady. She travels to La Civetta, a Tuscan villa connected with her college, to try to parse what Robin was trying to tell her. If she can figure out the connection between this villa and Shakespeare's Dark Lady, she will also perhaps find the truth behind Robin's death. Full of frantic research, uncertainties about the man she loved as an undergraduate in Italy and about the man she is now in a relationship with, the self-absorption of undergraduates, and murder, this story is a lush visit to Tuscany. Everything comes together in the end; Rose discovers more than she expects. A great read for summer adventure.


In Mira del Garda, Italy, a play is being staged at the villa Il Piacere. It is a play which was written in the early 1900's for an actress named Celia Sands, but was never performed, as she disappeared the night before the grand opening. Now, at Il Piacere, the play is being produced for the first time by the playwright's grandson Alessandro D'Ascanio, starring the actress Celia Sands. She is no relation to the original Sands, but the name is too much for him to resist, so she is given the part. Celia must make sure that she does not end up like her namesake, and with a plot full of romantic tensions with various men, the beautiful Italian countryside, and the requisite thin, rich and gorgeous Italian woman as competition for the man Celia is crazy about, well, it is enticingly Barbara Michaels-like. The text of the play and the historical background of the villa are just as important as the current happenings, and I love that blend of academic and romantic gothic.

The Grey Beginning / Barbara Michaels

Kathy is in Italy to see the Countess Morandini, the aristocratic grandmother of her dead husband Bart. Kathy's just come from a stay in a psychiatric hospital, trying to get over her loss of Bart and her neurotic insistence that he can't really be dead. She is taken in by the Countess under the misapprehension that she is pregnant with Bart's child; while staying with the Countess, Kathy meets David, a graduate student sifting through the contents of the attic for material for him to study and the Countess to sell. She also meets the local doctor and has a dinner or two with him. The other man in the story is 10 yr old Pietro, who is kept locked up due to the fear of hereditary madness. Kathy of course saves the day, the child and their sanity, after quite a nasty surprise.
It's an entertaining trip to Italy; Barbara Michaels always writes with intelligence and humour. Though it is certainly not her best, for an Italian escape, it is a good Gothic to pick up.

11 comments:

  1. Thanks for listing 2 companion books for The Sonnet Lover--it is fun to read several books with the same setting, and these all have a gothic element as well.

    This is the second reference to Susanna Kearsley that I've seen recently. I've never read anything by her, but will be looking for her now.

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  2. I like the category "academic romantic suspense"--sounds really interesting! I'll have to put these on my list, thanks!

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  3. Out of curiosity, what's the copyright date on that Barbara Michaels? Is it an old one?

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  4. Jill - as far as I can make out the copyright is 1984. I've only just read it; I missed it somehow.

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  5. These sound like fun. As Gentle Reader commented, "academic romantic suspense" does sound really interesting.

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  6. Oh I am taking note of these other two - sound so enjoyable. I've read some Barbara Michael's books before but it's been so long it'd be nice to re-visit.

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  7. Sonnet Lover sounds interesting. I will have to look into that that one further. Great reviews, by the way!

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  8. Barbara Michaels is excellent; I haven't read the other books you mentioned.

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  9. Those all sound fun. Which one should add to my list first?

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  10. Sherry - these are all fun reads, though I'm partial to the Kearsley. Glad they interest you!

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  11. I have The Sonnet Lover started, but I a few other books have gotten in the way...I need to get back to it soon. I think you recommended Seasons of Storms to me as I have that one on my book list. I'll have to see if I can find a copy. I have read and enjoyed Barbara Michaels in the past, too.

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