The Performance
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Publisher Description
The story of a love triangle played out through mutual manipulation
Giorgia was a talented actress before she abandoned her stage career and fell in love with Filippo. She settles into a life of quiet compromise—until one day she bumps into her old theater director, Mauro, who fans the acting flame back to life. But setting a restless soul on fire can be dangerous if she loses sight of the boundary between reality and fiction—and Giorgia collapses, ending up in a clinic. Filippo and Mauro find themselves both accomplices and adversaries, seduced by a dangerous game to heal and win back Giorgia: by writing the script for her perfect life. In this dazzling debut, Petrucci explores the ambiguous borders between love, possession, and control in clear, magnetic prose.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Petrucci's captivating character-driven debut explores the boundary between reality and illusion in the theater world. Giorgia, a talented actor who abandoned her career three years earlier for an "old fogies' life" with her partner, Filippo, believes "every relationship is a game that involves acting." She's pulled out of premature retirement by Mauro, her former acting instructor, who persuades her to star in the title role of his Peter Pan production. After Giorgia jumps out of a stage window on opening night, she is committed to a private clinic where she is diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. Romantic rivals Mauro and Filippo swoop in, Svengali-like, to attempt their own cure, coauthoring a script that would manifest who they want Giorgia to be. At a certain level, Giorgia is aware of what the men are doing and recognizes how they employ the theater's "code of deception," though their script also tampers with shared memories from their three lives. Petrucci adeptly straddles the blurred line between sanity and madness as Giorgia grapples with "mind altering" hallucinations and with graphic details of hospital treatment, and makes sharp references to characters such as Shakespeare's Olivia in Twelfth Night, with whom Giorgia identifies. It adds up to an unsettling and stunning tale.