Swimming to Elba
Description
A sensually charged novel about two girls growing up fast in a failing industrial town on the coast of Italy
Anna and Francesca are on the brink of everything: high school, adulthood, and the edge of ambition in their provincial town. It’s summer in Piombino, Italy, and in their skimpy bathing suits, flaunting their newly acquired curves, the girls suddenly have everyone in their thrall. This power opens their imagination to a destiny beyond Piombino; the resort town of Elba is just a ferry ride away and yet they’ve never dared to go. Maybe the future is waiting for them there, or somewhere beyond.
When their friendship suffers a blow, the girls set off on their own only to discover that their budding sexuality takes them further than they expect, though not as far as their dreams. As their choices take them to a painful crossroads, the girls must reconnect if they have any hope of escaping their small town destinies.
In this poetic, prizewinning debut, Silvia Avallone captures the lost innocence of a generation. Harrowing yet ultimately redemptive, Swimming to Elba is a story about the power of friendship, and the way that family, friendship, and economics shape our world.
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Booklist Review
Simmering sexuality runs through Italian author Avallone's English-language debut, which is set in the industrial town of Piombino. The thriving heart of Piombino is the steel plant, which simultaneously provides a livelihood for the residents and belches out toxic waste, poisoning the air they breathe. At the novel's heart are two families linked together by their 13-year-old daughters, Anna and Francesca, who have been best friends since early childhood. While Anna is the daughter of a gambler and a criminal who has just lost his job at the steel factory, Francesca's father is brutal and abusive, beating both Francesca and her mother. Beautiful and elusive, the girls only have eyes for each other until Anna's head is turned by all the attention the two receive from men. When a friend of Anna's older brother named Mattia swoops in and steals Anna's heart just after Francesca has declared her love for her best friend, the girls' bond is torn apart, setting them both on potentially risky paths. Readers will devour this richly detailed, sensual bildungsroman.--Huntley, Kristine Copyright 2010 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
Avallone's engaging debut novel explores the troubled friendship of two sexually precocious young girls, "thirteen going on fourteen," in the dead-end Italian town of Piombino, where the kids who don't escape often end up toiling at the local Lucchini steel plant. The author deftly captures the miserable home life of Francesca Morganti, the prettiest girl on the Via Stalingrado, whose father, Enrico, beats her and her defeated mother, Rosa. Francesca is in love with her best friend, Anna Sorrentino, who lives one floor up with her overprotective brother, Alessio; her Communist mother, Sandra; and her shady father, Arturo; who disappears for months at a time and returns with armfuls of gifts. Together, the girls dream of making it to Elba, the lush island just a short boat ride away from their constrictive coastal town. But a schism in their relationship is wrought by the arrival of Alessio's friend, Mattia, who's a good 10 years older than the girls and soon captures Anna's attention. Without Anna's friendship, Francesca withers under the rule of her abusive father, and begins to relinquish herself to a bleak future. Avallone does a good job of capturing the intensity of life-long female friendship and concomitant jealousies. Misfortunes pile up in the wake of the girls' absence from one another's lives, and while the central problem is eventually resolved, a handful of lesser plotlines are left dangling. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Reviews
Simmering sexuality runs through Italian author Avallone's English-language debut, which is set in the industrial town of Piombino. The thriving heart of Piombino is the steel plant, which simultaneously provides a livelihood for the residents and belches out toxic waste, poisoning the air they breathe. At the novel's heart are two families linked together by their 13-year-old daughters, Anna and Francesca, who have been best friends since early childhood. While Anna is the daughter of a gambler and a criminal who has just lost his job at the steel factory, Francesca's father is brutal and abusive, beating both Francesca and her mother. Beautiful and elusive, the girls only have eyes for each other until Anna's head is turned by all the attention the two receive from men. When a friend of Anna's older brother named Mattia swoops in and steals Anna's heart just after Francesca has declared her love for her best friend, the girls' bond is torn apart, setting them both on potentially risky paths. Readers will devour this richly detailed, sensual bildungsroman. Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Avallone's engaging debut novel explores the troubled friendship of two sexually precocious young girls, "thirteen going on fourteen," in the dead-end Italian town of Piombino, where the kids who don't escape often end up toiling at the local Lucchini steel plant. The author deftly captures the miserable home life of Francesca Morganti, the prettiest girl on the Via Stalingrado, whose father, Enrico, beats her and her defeated mother, Rosa. Francesca is in love with her best friend, Anna Sorrentino, who lives one floor up with her overprotective brother, Alessio; her Communist mother, Sandra; and her shady father, Arturo; who disappears for months at a time and returns with armfuls of gifts. Together, the girls dream of making it to Elba, the lush island just a short boat ride away from their constrictive coastal town. But a schism in their relationship is wrought by the arrival of Alessio's friend, Mattia, who's a good 10 years older than the girls and soon captures Anna's attention. Without Anna's friendship, Francesca withers under the rule of her abusive father, and begins to relinquish herself to a bleak future. Avallone does a good job of capturing the intensity of life-long female friendship and concomitant jealousies. Misfortunes pile up in the wake of the girls' absence from one another's lives, and while the central problem is eventually resolved, a handful of lesser plotlines are left dangling. (June)
[Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLCPW Annex Reviews
Avallone's engaging debut novel explores the troubled friendship of two sexually precocious young girls, "thirteen going on fourteen," in the dead-end Italian town of Piombino, where the kids who don't escape often end up toiling at the local Lucchini steel plant. The author deftly captures the miserable home life of Francesca Morganti, the prettiest girl on the Via Stalingrado, whose father, Enrico, beats her and her defeated mother, Rosa. Francesca is in love with her best friend, Anna Sorrentino, who lives one floor up with her overprotective brother, Alessio; her Communist mother, Sandra; and her shady father, Arturo; who disappears for months at a time and returns with armfuls of gifts. Together, the girls dream of making it to Elba, the lush island just a short boat ride away from their constrictive coastal town. But a schism in their relationship is wrought by the arrival of Alessio's friend, Mattia, who's a good 10 years older than the girls and soon captures Anna's attention. Without Anna's friendship, Francesca withers under the rule of her abusive father, and begins to relinquish herself to a bleak future. Avallone does a good job of capturing the intensity of life-long female friendship and concomitant jealousies. Misfortunes pile up in the wake of the girls' absence from one another's lives, and while the central problem is eventually resolved, a handful of lesser plotlines are left dangling. (June)
[Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC