FRANCESCA MARCIANO is the author of the novels" Rules of the Wild, Casa Rossa, " and "The End of Manners." She lives in Rome.
Magical, fleet-footed stories [that] leap around the globe, written
with authority and storytelling virtuosity . . . What makes these
tales stand out is Marciano s sympathetic but wryly unsentimental
ability not unlike Alice Munro s to capture the entire arc of a
character s life in a handful of pages, and her precise yet fluent
prose that immerses us, ineluctably, in the predicaments of her men
and women . . . Captivating. Michiko Kakutani, "The New York
Times"
This is an astonishing collection. Marciano s characters are caught
between the coming and going, unable to call any one place home.
They struggle with self-definition. They seek re-invention.
Impulsive characters, portrayed in moments of juncture, in moments
of crisis, in a series of indelible scenes. Written with
extraordinary clarity and elegance, "The Other Language" is a
vision of geography as it grounds us, as it shatters us, as it
transforms the soul. Jhumpa Lahiri
Wry, knowing, never less than engaging . . . stories [about] the
negotiations men and women make not only between themselves but
between cultures, [when] reality and imagination have a tendency to
bump up hard against each other a preoccupation that becomes more
pressing for all of us in an increasingly globalized world . . .
The Other Language almost has the feel of a novella: Its characters
are caught sharply in its clean Greek light, and the no man s land
of adolescence is precisely and movingly described. Marciano is a
screenwriter as well as a novelist, and she knows how to hold a
reader s attention, how to set a scene. Her dialogue,
unsurprisingly, is always fluid . . . The best stories in this
collection have the confidence of subtlety, and a touch of the
unexpected . . . When her "leggerezza "lightness" "shines through,
her characters and their adventures take flight. Erica Wagner, "The
New York Times Book Review"
""
Marciano portrays her locales with an amazing economy and
confidence . . . She has a sharp eye for the right details and a
sure grip on portraying people. It takes only a few sentences for
her to pull the reader right into their worlds and feel the
conflicting forces swirling around them, whether set in a remote
sub-Saharan African village or in overcrowded Venice during the
Biennale. Her subjects are the kind of events that loom large in
our lives when they occur, and remain to haunt us ever after. Her
voice is confident and lucid, and she shines when presenting both
the subtle and overt differences in culture and age. This is a book
full of vivid imagery and scenes, which achieves its poignancy with
telling observation rather than sentimentality. Michel Basilieres,
" Toronto Star"
The loss of fantasy provides the undercurrent in "The Other
Language, " whose characters mostly women, and all attempting to
balance transition with expectation navigate change with a quiet,
nearly lugubrious optimism. Marciano s is a world in which we see
and accept lives "not" lived. That sounds like the antithesis of
summer reading, yet Marciano traverses the canals of emotion from
despair to bliss seamlessly. Her characters will themselves to live
in the moment while licking past wounds and looking toward the
future. None find themselves in the future they imagined, but they
all find a self-reliance that brings happiness. A lucky few even
realize how adjusted expectations make our lives so much easier . .
. Wonderfully engaging and penetrating. Andrew Belonsky, "Everyday
eBook "
Intensely sensuous, emotionally wise. After inhaling the stories
from [this] brilliant new collection, my first urge (it may soon be
yours) is to race out to acquire every other work [Marciano] has
made. Her clean, straightforward language moves crisply and takes
shapely form. Her imagery vibrates. To open to any page of "The
Other Language" is to be drawn at once into her characters minds
and hearts, to recognize and care about what happens, and
(bewitched by the stately music of her narrating voice) to want to
stayon. Marciano nimbly depicts lives entwined in Italy, Africa and
New York, each (per Alice Munro, whose work Marciano's resembles) a
lifetime glimpsed in a moment. Her deep, laser-accurate
understanding of how we think about what we undertake, at every
phase of life, love and folly, astonishes. One finishes this
collection feeling altered, provoked, exhilarated . . . Complex,
rigorous . . . Pure wonder, veined with passages thatglitter. Joan
Frank, "San Francisco Chronicle"
Captivating . . . "The Other Language "features flirtations with
the exotic [that] prompt a sea change, [from] an adolescent crush
at the beach [to] a Chanel dress that acquires a talisman-like
power. With a nod to Paul Bowles, Marciano evokes the freedom found
in not belonging, as the heroine of her title story explains: She
felt she had finally become . . . someone who thought, dreamed and
made love in a different language. Megan O Grady, "Vogue"
Exquisite, transporting . . . The book transcends physical travel,
celebrating the power of encountering new cultures, personalities
and truths, and ultimately discovering different versions of
ourselves. Four stars. Robin Micheli, "People"
""
Glamorous . . . The women in Marciano s globe-trotting new book are
in search of transformation as they attempt to change their lives.
They are usually women untethered from domestic routines, if only
temporarily . . . A new dress, a change of scene, a spontaneous
invitation Marciano understands that these are the superficial
actions people take in order to get at the deeper impulses they
cannot name. Her characters are often surprised by the way their
lives are overturned, even as they are the ones to initiate the
upheaval . . . Reading Marciano, I was reminded of an old writing
teacher s adage, Bewilderment is the most human of emotions.
Marciano allows her characters their bewilderment, their curiosity,
and above all, their vulnerability. The result is a collection of
stories that is as entertaining as it is humane. Hannah Gersen,
"The Millions"
Featuring stories set in Greece, Rome, India, and even a remote
island off the coast of Tanzania, Marciano s collectionhelps us do
a bit of armchair traveling . . . Nine smart and elegant tales of
people, and change those looking for it, dealing with it, and
getting surprised by it inside and out. "Dame Magazine"
Thrilling, delicious, gorgeous . . . Marciano s protagonists live
in other countries, or with new or broken relationships. Like
competent speakers of a foreign language, they cope brilliantly
sometimes but they are never entirely sure-footed; pitfalls open at
their feet . . . Marciano uses the tightness of the short story to
focus sharply on the effect places [have] on their sense of self.
Foreign places are not backgrounds or settings; they are
participants affecting the protagonists as much as, or more, than
anything else in their lives. This is one of those truths that can
be hard to see or easy to discount. [But] it is brought sharply
into focus by Marciano s steely handling of language and her
pellucid evocation of place . . . Powerful. Claire Hopley, "The
Washington Times "
Impressive . . . With bilingual fluidity and a geographic carousel
as a CV, Francesca Marciano s worldview is expansive and deft. Her
nine-story collection examines the very notion of a journey. And
where it may take us. Jettisoning exhausted re-invention cliches,
she observes her actors as they choose fresh settings, and
sometimes-unfamiliar grammars. What they desire is to move beyond
familiar boundaries of all kinds in search of a real or other self.
In this self-hunt, eight of Marciano s third person tales focus on
female protagonists, women juggling volcanic life changes and
emotions . . . The heart of this book lies in a question: What
happens when we deliberately pass a threshold, or open a hidden
door? . . . Marciano s sparkling collection poignantly traces an
eternal human dream: that there is a better life, worth living.
Perhaps in a change of geography, language, or identity. As her
ironically provocative tales prove: the dream goes on. Penetrating,
bittersweet. Patricia E. Fogarty, "The American"
Compelling . . . The characters in Marciano s stories are displaced
both geographically and in matters of the heart. They are educated,
well-heeled and discontent, adrift in an ever-contracting world
that has clouded the notion of home. The title story one of the
finest begins with an enticing Alice Munro-like premise . . . In
'An Indian Soiree, ' reminiscent of the atmospheric, incisive
stories of Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, a couple has come to the
subcontinent for an extended sojourn, and in one the space of one
morning their marriage falls apart . . . 'Quantum Theory, ' set in
Africa and New York, offers a bittersweet meditation on the
significant difference between falling in love and being in love .
. . Many of these nine well-crafted and entertaining stories are
built on chance encounters, and in Marciano s assured hands the
reader accepts the intervention of fate without question. These are
stories about finding love in a fragile world, but even more, about
all of the connections past and present that shape us and anchor us
in place. Robert Weibezahl, "BookPage"
Seductive, cosmopolitan . . . In "The Other Language, "romance is
the cure for ennui. Marciano s heroines take the kind of risks most
of us have been conditioned to avoid: they reconnect with lost
lovers, migrate to faraway lands, and forge liaisons beyond the
bounds of their race, culture, and class. Marciano is an apt guide
to these exotic lives, [and] she engages us intimately with them .
. . Frustrated communication is a recurrent theme, as is the quest
for the elusive person or place that allows one to feel at home. In
Marciano s nuanced emotional universe, a foreigner is likely to
consider herself an outsider, no matter how long she s lived
elsewhere especially if she still dreams in her mother tongue. Amy
Fine Collins, "O, The Oprah Magazine"
From Rome with love, this elegant and colorful collection will get
you seriously thinking about giving up life in the States and going
to Venice, a small Greek village, or any of the other places she
uses as a setting inherstories. Jason Diamond, "Flavorwire"
You hold in your hands 304 pages of dynamite. These stories are
worldly, political, and funny to boot. I ve loved Marciano s
writing since her first novel, "Rules of the Wild "but I am
completely hot for "The Other Language." Gary Shteyngart
" The Other Language" is a voyage around the world, among travelers
and tourists, expats and interlopers, from the fringes of the
Venice Film Festival, to a sumptuous vacation spot in India, to a
remote island in East Africa, and beyond. This outstanding book has
a quality I find only in the best short-story collections: that,
after each chapter, I cannot immediately flip to the next, but need
time to absorb what has just unfolded so memorably before me.
Francesca Marciano is a superb storyteller. Tom Rachman, author of
"The Imperfectionists"
I loved every single one of these affecting, suspenseful, and
sublimely crafted stories. It s clear that Francesca Marciano is
worldly as well as wise, yet what she s surprisingly insightful
about is the hazardous nature of worldliness itself. Because our
modern lives are so mobile, our ways of communicating so refined,
we risk coming to believe that the borders defining class, culture,
and gender are somehow more permeable. "Think again," she tells us
in these nine cautionary tales the best new collection I ve read in
years. Julia Glass
I love being in Marciano s unpredictable worlds. These are touching
and true stories about the hiddenness of the hearts of the people
closest to us, and what s hiding in our own hearts. The writing is
so moving, and conveys so much truth with a marvelously light and
tender touch. One feels a haunting recognition for the minuscule
losses that are such a large part of everyday life. Sheila Heti
An absolute delight. Marciano has conjured up a set of far-flung
characters in Rome, Venice, New York, a Greek island, the coast of
East Africa as they struggle to make sense of their geographical
and emotional displacement. In their disjointed ways, they succeed
in finding their own little perch, and a modicum of serenity, in
this wide universe. A collection so compelling, so satisfying and
ultimately so addictive that one closes the book hankering for
more. Andrea di Robilant
In each transfixing, emotionally charged, sexy, piquantly funny,
and perfectly rendered story, Marciano makes you feel the heat of
the sun, the shiver of shadow, and the shock of unforeseen lust and
loss. As she dramatizes with spellbinding command the revelations
of displacement, the aphrodisiac power of fame, and the
slipperiness of love and authenticity, you can t bear to finish
Marciano s superlative stories, even though you can t wait to find
out what happens. Donna Seaman, "Booklist "(starred review)
Lovely . . . Each of Marciano s nine closely observed stories of
growing up, dislocation and family relationships is a gem, with
fully realized characters wistfully and beautifully captured
through dialogue that is both pensive and poignant. "Kirkus"
(starred review)
Excellent . . . Generations of Italian fled the poverty of their
native country, never to return. But in this century, Italians
leaving Italy are highly mobile citizens of the globalized world
who, nevertheless, remain recognizably Italian. It s these Italians
who populate Marciano s stories. Her women (and sometimes her men)
don t necessarily want what they have they make choices and make
do; they travel, get divorced, adapt. The effect is both luxurious
and down to earth, a pleasurable sojourn with characters Marciano
depicts as simultaneously likable and irritating, bold and
retiring, types and individuals not unlike those reading about
them. [A] strong collection. "Publishers Weekly
" Seductive, cosmopolitan . . . In "The Other Language, "romance is
the cure for ennui. Marciano s heroines take the kind of risks most
of us have been conditioned to avoid: they reconnect with lost
lovers, migrate to faraway lands, and forge liaisons beyond the
bounds of their race, culture, and class. Marciano is an apt guide
to these exotic lives, [and] she engages us intimately with them .
. . Frustrated communication is a recurrent theme, as is the quest
for the elusive person or place that allows one to feel at home. In
Marciano s nuanced emotional universe, a foreigner is likely to
consider herself an outsider, no matter how long she s lived
elsewhere especially if she still dreams in her mother tongue. Amy
Fine Collins, "O, The Oprah Magazine"
"
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