Thursday 28 September 2017

GIVEAWAY AUTUNNALE! (versione Italiana)


Quest'estate ho finalmente letto Ann Patchett, con il suo Il bene comune (leggi la recensione qui), che mi e' piaciuto davvero molto. Una saga familiare scritta in maniera sublime, intelligente e per nulla banale.

Il bene comune mi e' piaciuto cosi' tanto che ho deciso di regalarne una copia (in ITALIANO) e "diffondere" l'amore per la maestria della Patchett!

Per VINCERE:

1. Diventa un lettore fisso (follower) del mio blog, cliccando sull'icona FOLLOW che trovi in fondo alla colonna di destra

2. Segui @matiminibooksreviews su INSTAGRAM     (https://www.instagram.com/matiminibooksreviews)

3. TAGGA 2 amici sul post del giveaway di Instagram 

Il concorso e' valido su territorio internazionale per lettori ITALIANI e si concludera' a mezzanotte del 4 ottobre 2017 . (per vincere una copia in inglese, leggi il regolamento qui).

Il vincitore verra' estratto a sorte ed annunciato il 5 ottobre 2017.

Buona fortuna!!!

Mati



AUTUMN GIVEAWAY!!! (English version)



This summer I finally read Commonwealth by Ann Patchett - read my review here, which I truly enjoyed. Commonwealth is a great family saga, I really liked Ann Patchett's writing style, swift and clever and never boring.  

I loved Commonwealth so much that I have decided to spread the love for this book but giving one copy away! 

So, to try and WIN this great novel all you need to do is:

1. Become a follower of my blog, clicking on FOLLOW at the bottom of the column on the right side of the page

2. Follow me @matiminibooksreviews on INSTAGRAM     (https://www.instagram.com/matiminibooksreviews/  - direct link on the right side of this page)

3. TAG 2 friends on the giveaway post on Instagram 

The contest is open worldwide and will close at midnight (UK time) on 4th October 2017.

The winner will be randomly selected and announced on 5th October 2017. 

Per vincere una copia del libro in Italiano, clicca qui.

Good luck and keep reading!! :) 

Mati






Book Review: Behold the dreamers - I. Mbue


“Most people were sticking to their own kind. Even in New York  City, even in a place of many nations and cultures, men and women, young and old, rich and poor, preferred their kind when it came to those they kept closest. And why shouldn’t they? It was far easier to do so than to spend one’s limited energy trying to blend into a world one was never meant to be a part of. That was what made New York so wonderful. It had a world for everyone.”

I really liked this book, a complex story about immigration, the American dream, home sickness, and families. Jende and Nani are from Cameroon and they both emigrate to the USA, specifically NY city for a better life for them and their son. They both work hard and have a good but hard life, him working as a chaffeur for a Wall Street exec and his family, her working in a nursing facility and studying to become a pharmacist. But, they don't have the proper paperwork they need to stay forever and his employer's life and job becomes a mess.
I really liked how the stories of the two families, the poor African one and the rich American one, are so different and yet so interlinked. I loved how passionate Nani is about becoming a pharmacist and also about America, and I also loved how sweet are Jende's memories of Cameroon.
It is a novel that stimulates a lot of reflection about the life and stresses we create for ourselves, about the dreams to have a better life, about being rich and/or being happy, about where home is.
The first half of the book is very positive, optimistic, while the second part is very bitter-sweet, however even with all the difficulties and sorrows and obstacles that both families have to face, they end up being ok, and that's what I was left with at the end: we try, we might sicced or fail, but we really try to have a good life for our kids and hopefully they will appreciate it.
Of all the books I have read recently about immigration this is by far one of the best as it is very realistic and yet doesn't leave you with a lack of hope in the end.
In summary a great read, fr both plot and writing style, which I'd highly recommend to all readers who like modern American fiction and especially the topic of immigration and the "American dream".

“Home will never go away
Home will be here when you come back
You may go to bring back fortune
You may go to escape misfortune
You may even go, just because you want to go
But when you come back
We hope you’ll come back
Home will still be here.”

Overall rating: 7      Plot: 7     Writing style: 8      Cover:  8


Title: Behold the dreamers
Author: Imbolo Mbue
Publisher: Fourth Estate Books
Pages: 400
Publication year: 2017

Plot:
New York, 2007: a city of dreamers and strivers, where the newly-arrived and the long-established jostle alike for a place on the ladder of success. And Jende Jonga, who has come from Cameroon, has just set his foot on the first rung.
Clark Edwards is a senior partner at Lehman Brothers bank. In need of a discrete and reliable chauffeur, he is too preoccupied to closely check the paperwork of his latest employee.
Jende’s new job draws him, his wife Neni and their young son into the privileged orbit of the city’s financial elite. And when Clark’s wife Cindy offers Neni work and takes her into her confidence, the couple begin to believe that the land of opportunity might finally be opening up for them.
But there are troubling cracks in their employers’ facades, and when the deep fault lines running beneath the financial world are exposed, the Edwards’ secrets threaten to spill out into the Jonga’s lives.
Faced with the loss of all they have worked for, each couple must decide how far they will go in pursuit of their dreams – and what they are prepared to sacrifice along the way.

The Author:
Imbolo Mbue is a native of the seaside town of Limbe, Cameroon. She holds a BS from Rutgers University and an MA from Columbia University. A resident of the United States for more than a decade, she lives in New York City. 





Tuesday 26 September 2017

Book Review: Roseanna - M. Sjowall - P. Whaloo


“...you have three of the most important virtues a policeman can have,” he thought. “You are stubborn and logical, and completely calm.”
What a good, old fashioned crime novel, with a down to earth detective, Martin Beck, and a proper investigation in Sweden in the 60s, with no technology as such, but just investigators using their brains and their feet to find the killer. The crime itself reminded a bit Agatha Christie's as it was committed on a closed environment (a boat) and there are several people that could be the perpetrator for several reasons. Martin Beck is an interesting character, quite moody and depressed, reminded me of Mankell's novels, which of course were written at a later date though.
An absolute gen of a crime novel, I surely will read the other nine books of the serie - Roseanna being the first and I would recommend it to readers who like a good, solid, old fashioned mystery book.
“January 7 arrived and looked like January 7. The streets were full of gray, frozen people without money.” 
Overall rating: 7,5      Plot: 7,5     Writing style: 7      Cover:  5
Title: Roseanna
Author: Maj Sjowall, Per Wahloo
Publisher: Fourth Estate Books
Pages: 304
Publication year: 1965

Plot:

The first book in the classic Martin Beck detective series from the 1960s - the novels that shaped the future of Scandinavian crime writing. Hugely acclaimed, the Martin Beck series were the original Scandinavian crime novels and have inspired the writings of Stieg Larsson, Henning Mankell and Jo Nesbo. Written in the 1960s, 10 books completed in 10 years, they are the work of Maj Sjowall and Per Wahloo - a husband and wife team from Sweden. They follow the fortunes of the detective Martin Beck, whose enigmatic, taciturn character has inspired countless other policemen in crime fiction; without his creation Ian Rankin's John Rebus or Henning Mankell's Kurt Wallander may never have been conceived. The novels can be read separately, but are best read in chronological order, so the reader can follow the characters' development and get drawn into the series as a whole. 'Roseanna' begins on a July afternoon, the body of a young woman is dredged from Sweden's beautiful Lake Vattern. Three months later, all that Police Inspector Martin Beck knows is that her name is Roseanna, that she came from Lincoln, Nebraska, and that she could have been strangled by any one of eighty-five people. 

The Authors:
Per Fredrik Wahlöö (5 August 1926 – 22 June 1975) -and Maj Sjöwall (born September 25, 1935) are Swedish authors, best known for the series of ten novels about the exploits of Martin Beck, a police detective in Stockholm, published between 1965 and 1975.Sjöwall had a 13-year relationship with Wahlöö which lasted until his death in 1975

Thursday 21 September 2017

Book Review: Pulvis et umbra - A. Manzini




“Da quando ero piccolo ho sempre avuto la sensazione di stare nella camera della morte, hai presente? Quel percorso che fanno fare ai tonni nelle mattanze? Per quanto sia tortuoso, pieno di angoli e svolte, finiscono tutti nella trappola per essere trasformati in scatolette. Ecco, per me è la stessa cosa. Qualsiasi decisione tu prenda nella vita arrivi sempre nello stesso posto, nella scatoletta. Ci illudiamo di fare delle scelte, ma la strada è già segnata e questo non me lo toglie nessuno dalla testa...”

Premessa: amo Rocco, amo come parla in romanaccio de' Trastevere, amo il suo non avere peli sulla llingua, amo il suo attaccamento alle sue Clarks e i suoi loden anche con la neve, amo la sua ruvidezza e il suo lato "oscuro", ma amo anche la sua tenerezza, il suo proteggere amici e colleghi, il suo dolore, il suo parlare con il fantasma della moglie deceduta. Direi che, insieme all'avvocato Guerrieri di Carofiglio, e' il mio "eroe" maschile letterario.
Quindi ho aspettato questo settimo capitolo della saga di Schiavone con apprensione (altro che groupies degli anni '70!) e appena l'ho ricevuto, l'ho divorato. E' davvero facile rientrare nel mondo di Rocco, e farsi prendere dalle indagini, dai problemi di Rocco e da quelli dei suo agenti.
Come sempre l'umorismo del vicequestore fa morire, soprattutto quando si tratta dei due agenti D'Intino e Deruta, come pure rimane intatta la sua avversione per le varie rotture che si presentano in questura sotto vari gradi.
Ma in questo ultimo romanzo, forse ancora piu' che nel precedente 7-7-2007, Rocco appare molto malinconico, Marina e' quasi del tutto sparita e chiaramente Rocco vorrebbe che tornasse. E Schiavone fa vedere un lato molto piu' tenero di se',un lato che ha bisogno di amore e compagnia, sia impersonificati nella cagnina Lupa che sta sempre al suo fianco, che nel vicino adolescente, per cui Rocco diventa una specie di figura paterna/amico prendendolo sotto la sua ala. 
Non voglio fare spoiler, quindi non vado avanti a raccontare perche' questo libro e' cosi' malinconico, tanto che alla fine avrei tanto voluto essere li' con Schiavone e dargli un super abbraccio, perche', come dice il titolo Rocco in questo romanzo mangia tanta polvere e deve affrontare tante ombre, alcune politiche, professionali, altre molto piu' private e personali. 
Un libro che si legge tutto d'un fiato, che vorresti non finisse mai, un romanzo che unisce con maestria giallo, humour, malinconia, scelte di vita, amore, amicizia, valori. Una bellissima lettura (anche se per me il preferito della serie rimane sempre 7-7-2007). E ora che e' finita, non vedo l'ora che sia trasformata in serie tv con il mitico Giallini e che Mr Manzini si sbrighi a scrivere il seguito!

“Perfetto. Hai appena imparato l’articolo sette della costituzione romana che recita: uno sticazzi al momento giusto risolve mille problemi....”

Overall rating: 8      Plot: 8     Writing style: 9      Cover:  7,5



Title: Pulvis et umbra
Author: Antonio Manzini
Publisher: Sellerio Editore
Pages: 416
Publication year: 2017

Plot:
In Pulvis et umbra due trame si svolgono in parallelo. Ad Aosta si trova il cadavere di una trans. A Roma, in un campo verso la Pontina, due cani pastore annusano il cadavere di un uomo che porta addosso un foglietto scritto. L’indagine sul primo omicidio si smarrisce urtando contro identità nascoste ed esistenze oscurate. Il secondo lascia un cadavere che puzza di storie passate e di vendette. In entrambi Schiavone è messo in mezzo con la sua persona. E proprio quando il fantasma della moglie Marina comincia a ritirarsi, mentre l’agente Caterina Rispoli rivela un passato che chiede tenerezza e un ragazzino solitario risveglia sentimenti paterni inusitati, quando quindi la ruvida scorza con cui si protegge è sfidata da un po’ di umanità intorno, le indagini lo sospingono a lottare contro le sue ombre. Tenta di afferrarle e gli sembra che si trasformino in polvere. La polvere che lascia ogni tradimento.

The Author:

Antonio Manzini (Roma7 agosto 1964) è un attoresceneggiatoreregista e scrittore italiano.
Ha pubblicato i romanzi Sangue marcio e La giostra dei criceti, quest'ultimo pubblicato da Sellerio nel 2017. La serie con Rocco Schiavone è iniziata con il romanzo Pista nera (Sellerio, 2013) cui sono seguiti La costola di Adamo (2014), Non è stagione(2015), Era di maggio (2015), Cinque indagini romane per Rocco Schiavone (2016), 7-7-2007 (2016) e Pulvis et umbra (2017). Nel 2015 ha pubblicato Sull’orlo del precipizio in altra collana di questa casa editrice. Nel 2016 ha anche pubblicato il romanzo Orfani Bianchi per la casa editrice Chiare lettere.

Monday 18 September 2017

Book review: Vinegar Girl - A. Tyler


“In my country they have proverb: ‘Beware against the sweet person, for sugar has no nutrition.’” This was intriguing. Kate said, “Well, in my country they say that you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.” 

I really like Anne Tyler's serene, tranquil yet poignant writing style. She is very good at describing families and people with all their qualities and weaknesses and this novel is very witty as well as superbly written. This is the story of a father who, thinking of doing a good thing for both his researcher and his daughter, try to match them up so he can obtain his green card to stay in the US.
Kate Battista, daughter, sister, nursery teacher is a very no non-sense person, quite blunt and direct and with little filters between what she thinks and what she says. Which is brilliant, I loved her, even if her attitude leads her to troubles in her workplace. Pyotr comes from a very different culture and his ways os expressing himself are hilarious. There are comic scenes in the novel between the family relatives that are very funny and witty. The book is apparently a modern remake of Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, which I have never read so I cannot really comment on that.
Overall I really liked this novel, loved the main character and Tyler's writing style. 



“It’s hard being a man. Have you ever thought about that? Anything that’s bothering them, men think they have to hide it. They think they should seem in charge, in control; they don’t dare show their true feelings. No matter if they’re hurting or desperate or stricken with grief, if they’re heartsick or they’re homesick or some huge dark guilt is hanging over them or they’re about to fail big-time at something—‘Oh, I’m okay,’ they say. ‘Everything’s just fine.’ They’re a whole lot less free than women are, when you think about it.” 

Overall rating: 7      Plot: 7     Writing style: 8      Cover:  6

Title: Vinegar girl
Author: Anne Tyler
Publisher: Vintage
Pages: 272
Publication year: 2016

Plot:
Kate Battista is stuck. How did she end up running house and home for her eccentric scientist father and infuriating younger sister Bunny? 
Dr Battista has other problems. His brilliant young lab assistant, Pyotr, is about to be deported. And without Pyotr, his new scientific breakthrough will fall through…
When Dr Battista cooks up an outrageous plan that will enable Pyotr to stay in the country, he’s relying – as usual – on Kate to help him. Will Kate be able to resist the two men’s touchingly ludicrous campaign to win her round?

The Author:
Anne Tyler (born October 25, 1941) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning American novelist, short story writer, and literary critic. She has published 20 novels,Tyler resides in the Roland Park neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland, where most of her novels are set.

Wednesday 13 September 2017

Book Review: Touch & go - L. Gardner


“Violence, the great equaliser. Cared nothing for money, class, occupation. One day, it simply found you.” 

My first Lisa Gardner's book and I loved it! Such a suspense filled, fast moving detective story!
I really liked all the main detective characters and, even if I didn't read the first book in the Tessa Leoni's serie, it was quite easy to catch up with her personality and to like her. The character I really liked though is Wyatt Foster, a lied back, easy going, smart sergeant in New Hampshire, very down to earth and likable I really hope the promises of a relationship between the two gets concrete in the next chapter of the serie! I just bought Love you more, the first novel with Tessa Leoni, as I am curios to read about her deceased husband and how she went from police office to private investigator.
I'd highly recommend this novel to readers who like books filled with a lot of surprises, plotting, detective work. Brilliant!
.
Overall rating: 8      Plot: 8     Writing style: 7      Cover:  6


Title: Touch & Go
Author: Lisa Gardner
Publisher: Headline
Pages: 480
Publication year: 2013

Plot:
Justin and Libby Denbe have it all: a beautiful daughter; a gorgeous house; a great marriage, admired by all. Arriving at the crime scene of their home, investigator Tessa Leoni finds no witnesses, no ransom demands or motive - just a perfect little family, gone. But Tessa knows that flawless fronts can hide the darkest secrets. Now, she must race against the clock to uncover the truth. Who would want to kidnap such a family? And how far would they be willing to go?

The Author:
Lisa Gardner, a #1 New York Times crime thriller novelist, began her career in food service, but after catching her hair on fire numerous times, she took the hint and focused on writing instead. Lisa lives in New Hampshire with her auto-racing husband and black-diamond skiing daughter. She spends her days writing in her loft with a young silly sheltie and a adventurous terrier. http://lisagardner.com/about

Sunday 10 September 2017

Book Review: Three Martini lunch - S. Rindell


"I thought most girls were just waiting for a ring." "Well, I am waiting for a ring... On the telephone. From my boss. Telling me I've been promoted." 

I was captured by the title of this novel, I never heard of that American expression before - I had to google it! - but I love Martini (my poison is Martini bianco not the cocktail Martini, though), I love NY and stories set there, especially in the 50s, and I definitely love novels about the publishing world. So this looked like the perfect read for me, hopefully as enjoyable as My Salinger year by J. Rakoff or No Angel by P. Vincenzi.
I loved the female main character, Eden, how determined she is to make a career for herself in the publishing world, despite her being a woman.
I did not love, however the "digressions" about the other book characters, good stories on their own, but a bit too much jumping around plots in my view.
Overall a pleasant read, I'd have loved it if it was just all about Eden though.

“Back in those days My Old Man was king of what they called three-martini lunch. This meant that in dimly lit steak houses all over Manhattan my father made bold, impetuous deals over gin and oysters. That was how it was done. Publishing was a place for men with ferocity and an appetite for life.” 
Overall rating: 6,5      Plot:  6,5    Writing style: 6,5      Cover:  5
Title: Three Martini lunch
Author: Suzanne Rindell
Publisher: Allison & Busby
Pages: 543
Publication year: 2016

Plot:
Cliff Nelson is the privileged son of an editor at a New York publishing house. Having dropped out of college he's slumming it around Greenwich village, enjoying the nightlife, booze, drugs and the idea that he's the next Kerouac. Eden Katz arrives in New York fresh-faced and filled with ambition to realise her dream of becoming an editor. She has to develop a thicker skin and adopt an imposture of her own in order to succeed. Finally Miles Tillman, a black soon-to-be Columbia graduate and publishing house bike messenger, is an aspiring writer who feels he straddles various worlds and belongs to none. Their choices, concealment's and betrayals as they reach for their goals ripple outwards leaving none of them unchanged.
The Author:
Suzanne Rindell is a doctoral student in American modernist literature at Rice University. Her first novel, THE OTHER TYPIST, debuted on May 7, 2013. It has been translated into 15 languages and optioned for film by Fox Searchlight Pictures. Her second novel, THREE-MARTINI LUNCH, is forthcoming from Putnam on April 5, 2016. She lives in New York City and is currently working on a third novel.

Thursday 7 September 2017

Book Review: The book of unknown Americans - C. Henriquez


“We're the unknown Americans, the ones no one even wants to know, because they've been told they're supposed to be scared of us and because maybe if they did take the time to get to know us, they might realize that we're not that bad, maybe even that we're a lot like them. And who would they hate then?” 

They are from Mexico, Puertorico, Panama, Guatemala, they have no choice but to leave their mother countries and to find a new life in Delaware, USA. They are all hard workers, simple people who just want peace and a decent life. They all left their countries thinking of the USA as the "promised land", the land where everybody can make it. And yet they remain in their little "ghetto", where they just speak spanish and cook Hispanic food and there is a great sense of community. They struggle to find jobs, they have underpaid jobs with zero satisfaction but they don't complain as they have moved for their families and they have hope for a better future.
However, there is a sense of sadness in the novel, a sense of hopeless feeling for the future among the characters that have left me a sense of bitterness at the end I cannot shift.
A very interesting novel, it is fascinating to read how these people live and how they are treated, the differences in cultures. I loved how strong the women are in the novel, never complaining even if they are homesick. 
The brief chapters where other immigrants tell their stories distracted me from the main plot and I did not like that very much.
Overall an interesting read, quite sad and bitter.


Overall rating: 6,5      Plot: 7     Writing style: 6,5      Cover:  6,5


Title: The book of unknown Americans
Author: Cristina Henriquez
Publisher: Canongate Books
Pages: 304
Publication year: 2014

Plot:
A boy and a girl who fall in love. Two families whose hopes collide with destiny. An extraordinary novel that offers a resonant new definition of what it means to be American.
Arturo and Alma Rivera have lived their whole lives in Mexico. One day, their beautiful fifteen-year-old daughter, Maribel, sustains a terrible injury, one that casts doubt on whether she'll ever be the same. And so, leaving all they have behind, the Riveras come to America with a single dream: that in this country of great opportunity and resources, Maribel can get better.
When Mayor Toro, whose family is from Panama, sees Maribel in a Dollar Tree store, it is love at first sight. It's also the beginning of a friendship between the Rivera and Toro families, whose web of guilt and love and responsibility is at this novel's core.
Woven into their stories are the testimonials of men and women who have come to the United States from all over Latin America. Their journeys and their voices will inspire you, surprise you, and break your heart. 
The Author:
Cristina Henríquez is the author of The Book of Unknown Americans, which was a New York TimesNotable Book of 2014 and one of Amazon’s Top 10 Books of the Year. It was the Daily Beast Novel of the Year, a Washington Post Notable Book, an NPR Great Read, a Target Book of the Month selection, and was chosen one of the best books of the year by BookPage, Oprah.com, and School Library Journal. It was also longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction and was a finalist for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize.
Henriquez is also the author The World In Half (a novel), and Come Together, Fall Apart: A Novella and Stories, which was a New York Times Editors’ Choice selection.
Her stories have been published in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Glimmer Train, The American Scholar, Ploughshares, TriQuarterly, and AGNI along with the anthology This is Not Chick Lit: Original Stories by America’s Best Women Writers.
Cristina’s non-fiction has appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, Real Simple, The Oxford American, and Preservation as well as in the anthologies State by State: A Panoramic Portrait of America and Thirty Ways of Looking at Hillary: Women Writers Reflect on the Candidate and What Her Campaign Meant.
She was featured in Virginia Quarterly Review as one of “Fiction’s New Luminaries,” has been a guest on National Public Radio, and is a recipient of the Alfredo Cisneros Del Moral Foundation Award, a grant started by Sandra Cisneros in honor of her father.
Cristina earned her undergraduate degree from Northwestern University and is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She lives in Illinois.

Monday 4 September 2017

Book review: Le notti blu - C. Marchelli


“Se c'è una regola dell'amore, vorrebbe dirle, è questa: soccorrersi senza bisogno di chiamarsi.” 

Adoro la copertina di questo libro! Sono stata subito attratta dalla trama, mi e' sembrato un po# la versione "maschile" di L'amore che mi resta della Marzano (che avevo recensito qui). Le notti blu e' infatti la storia di un padre che perde il figlio suicida. Una storia dolce e triste, in cui i genitori non trovano pace, ma scoprono, invece, un enorme segreto sul figlio.
La trama di per se' e' interessante, ma lo stile non mi ha presa per niente, l'ho trovato tedioso, fastidioso. i filosofeggianti dialoghi del padre mi sono stati pesantissimi e le descrizioni geologiche del figlio pure. La scrittura, a mio avviso, e' troppo piatta e non riesco a provare alcun sentimento per nessuno dei personaggi, solo un certo fastidio che non so definire con esattezza.
Nel complesso quindi non mi e' piaciuto, troppo piatto e a tratti tedioso.


Overall rating: 5      Plot: 6     Writing style: 5      Cover:  7,5


Title: Le notti blu
Author: Chiara Marchelli
Publisher: Giulio Perrone editore
Pages: 223
Publication year: 2017

Plot:
Tutti crediamo di conoscere le persone che amiamo: Larissa e Michele si conoscono da una vita, così come pensano di conoscere Mirko, il figlio che lascia gli Stati Uniti, dove è nato, per vivere in Italia e sposare Caterina. Un colpo di fulmine che non hanno mai approvato pienamente.
Larissa e Michele sono sposati da oltre trent’anni, vivono a New York, hanno una vita agiata e hanno saputo costruire un rapporto solido, basato sulla cura reciproca, sulle piccole e generose attenzioni e sulle affettuose abitudini della loro quotidianità.
Le notti blu racconta, come una sorta di lastra raggi X, il matrimonio di Larissa e Michele e la loro vita che sembra normalissima, se non fosse per un dolore tremendo che accompagna, e regola, le loro esistenze. È una notizia dall’ Italia a rompere l’equilibrio che la coppia ha faticosamente costruito.


The Author:
Chiara Marchelli è nata nel 1972 ad Aosta e vive a New York dal 1999 dove lavora come editor, copywriter e traduttrice.
Laureata in lingue orientali all'Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, dopo aver vissuto in Belgio e in Egitto, esordisce nel 2003 con il romanzo Angeli e cani, Premio Rapallo Carige per la donna scrittrice Opera prima
Dopo gli incarichi presso l’Università di Pavia e la John Cabot University di Roma, diventa titolare dal 2004 della cattedra di Italiano e Scrittura creativa all'Università di New York.
Dopo la raccolta di racconti Sotto i tuoi occhi del 2007, torna la romanzo nel 2014 con L'amore involontario al quale fanno seguito Le mie parole per te l'anno successivo e Le notti blu nel 2017, entrato nella dozzina del Premio Strega.