Lambrusco, Ellen Cooney
Lambrusco, Ellen Cooney
List: $20.00 | Sale: $14.00
Club: $10.00

Lambrusco

Author: Ellen Cooney

Narrator: Cassandra Campbell

Unabridged: 11 hr 27 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/22/2008


Synopsis

The extraordinary Resistance movement of the Italian people in the Second World War is brought to life in a captivating, deeply moving story of a mother’s search for her son, by the author of the widely acclaimed A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies.

The year is 1943. Nazis have invaded Italy; American troops have landed. At Aldo’s restaurant on the Adriatic coast, Lucia Fantini, wife of the late Aldo, entertained customers for years with her marvelous opera singing, but normal operations have ceased; the restaurant has been seized by nazifascisti, and a resistance squad of waiters and tradesmen has been formed, led by Lucia’s son Beppino. When he disappears after acting on his own to destroy a German truck, Lucia asks, “What kind of a partisan are you, blowing something up without telling your mother?” and sets off to look for him.

Lucia is aided in her efforts by a richly drawn cast of characters, including Annmarie Malone, the American Army Intelligence officer who’s a professional golfer back home; Tito Roncuzzi, the butcher who taught neighborhood dogs to pee on Fascists’ boots, Etto Renzetti, the factory owner who scoffs at Dante, and Ugo Fantini, Aldo’s physician cousin, who has reasons of his own for wanting to be near Lucia.

Lucia’s journey across a war-devastated Italy is operatic in its scope and intensity. Ellen Cooney has drawn on her heritage as a third-generation Italian-American to invoke not only a country in crisis but also its literature, its moods, and, most of all, its music. This is a tale told with lyrical grace and an effervescent comic spirit to match the wine that nourishes them all--Lambrusco.

About The Author

Ellen Cooney is the author of seven novels. Her short stories have appeared widely in magazines and journals, including The New Yorker, The Literary Review, and Glimmer Train. She has received fiction fellowships from the NEA and the Massachusetts Artists Foundation, and taught creative writing for 25 years in Boston and Cambridge, most recently as writer-in-residence at MIT. She now lives in midcoast Maine.Cassandra Campbell is an actress, director, and teacher who has performed in New York at the Public Theater, the Mint Theater, and the Clurman Theatre. She is an accomplished voice-over artist whose credits include numerous audiobooks, documentaries, and commercials in both Italian and English.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Sandy on January 06, 2017

This really is a rather lame book, however I DO feel as if I have spent time in Italy, so it has some fundamental merit.... It is a story about a woman whose life prior to the start of the book, has revolved around opera and singing at her husband's restaurant. The book is her narrative of her chaot......more

Goodreads review by Lynne on February 26, 2010

I wasn't engaged with any of the characters until near the end. The horror of the partisans'lives grew steadily throughout the book.......more

Goodreads review by Jerry on March 28, 2023

I was disappointed. The fly leaf suggested something more exciting than the book delivers. It is too introspective even for a first person narrator. Most of the action, if one can call it action, of the novel takes place in a detached, stream-of-consciousness narrative as the protagonist tries to ma......more

Goodreads review by Ann on May 28, 2008

This is a story of the German occupation of Italy during World War II. Lucia Fantini has spent her adult life singing opera to patrons of her husband's restaurant. But now the restaurant has been seized to service the Nazis and Lucia's son has formed a partisan unit with waiters from the restaurant.......more


Quotes

“Cooney’s darkly comic journey of revelation triumphantly demonstrates the sustaining power of love, duty, family, and friendship.”
Booklist

“Lovingly presented . . . touching . . . Cooney explores how war causes not just injury to the body, but more importantly explains how every participant can be ‘injured in his nerves, in his self, in his soul.’”
Kirkus

"This is surely Ellen Cooney's most original work. Who else would have placed a squad of partisans in the Italian Resistance, who happen to be waiters in a seaside restaurant famous for the opera sung by the owner's wife, against a backdrop of bombed, wartorn Italy? The effect is positively Felliniesque."
—Anita Desai