Four Hundred and Forty Steps to the Sea
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- 8,49 €
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- 8,49 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
“Family secrets and a transportive Italian setting keep the reader thoroughly immersed, making for a satisfying story of one woman’s coming-of-age.” —Publishers Weekly
Nestled into the cliffs in southern Italy’s Amalfi coast, Positano is an artist’s vision, with rows of brightly hued houses perched above the sea and picturesque staircases meandering up and down the hillside. Santina, still a striking woman despite old age and the illness that saps her last strength, is spending her final days at her home, Villa San Vito. The magnificent eighteenth-century palazzo is very different from the tiny house in which she grew up. And as she decides its fate, she must confront the choices that led her here so long ago . . .
In 1949, Positano is as yet undiscovered by tourists, a beautiful, secluded village shaking off the dust of war. Hoping to escape poverty, young Santina takes domestic work in London, ultimately becoming a housekeeper to a distinguished British major and his creative, impulsive wife, Adeline. When they move to Positano, Santina returns with them, raising their daughter as Adeline’s mental health declines. With each passing year, Santina becomes more deeply enmeshed within the family, trying to navigate her complicated feelings for a man who is much more than an employer—while hiding secrets that could shatter the only home she knows . . .
“Pick up this book to be swept away like a frothy Mediterranean wave, with its melodic writing style that’s richly filled with beautiful imagery in a setting so sunny and beautiful you will be transported!” —Beachcombing Magazine
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In a passionate ode to love stories and the magic found in a small Italian village, Alexander (Under a Sardinian Sky) elevates a simple romance, imbuing the epic narrative with the wonders of self-discovery. Framed as a story spanning Santina Guida's life, the plot opens with her end-of-life musings, then returns to her youth in post-WWII Italy. After her mother dies, her father sends her away from Amalfi, her mountain home, to the coastal village of Positano. She leaps at the chance to take a housekeeping job in England, but her second employers there, Henry and Adeline Crabtree, decide to move to Positano after the birth of their daughter, and Santina returns to Italy with them, stepping into the roles of caregiver, teacher, mother, and student. Adeline's mental illness increases following the birth of her daughter; meanwhile, Henry's determination to teach Santina about literature brings them very close together, and Santina begins to fall for him. Family secrets and a transportive Italian setting keep the reader thoroughly immersed, making for a satisfying story of one woman's coming-of-age.