Review by Booklist Review
After Nives' husband, Anteo, suffered a fatal stroke while feeding the pigs, Nives rejected the idea of moving in with her daughter and decided to keep the farm running herself. The chores are unending, but her favorite hen, Giacomina, becomes a source of comfort: her emotional support chicken. When Giacomina gets hypnotized by a TV commercial, Nives must call the local veterinarian. The phone call quickly evolves into a walk down memory lane, as it turns out that the new widow and the old vet have more of a history than anyone in their small town realized. As the two relive their past, Nives realizes she's in full control of her future. A touching, heartfelt novella and Italian author Naspini's first book available in English, Nives is the reckoning of a woman blindsided by the unexpected. Fans of Elisabeth Egan, Marian Keyes, and Isabel Allende will appreciate the care and compassion Naspini takes with Nives' journey of self-awareness, self-reliance, and self-acceptance. A delightful story of the muddled, confusing time of love after loss.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A recently widowed Italian farm wife spends a long night on the phone with her local veterinarian. With its dependence on dialogue and rising tension as revelations about the characters' pasts build toward a present-moment crisis, Naspini's short novel feels like a two-character play. The usually resilient 66-year-old Nives falls into despair when her husband of many years dies unexpectedly. Rebuffing a suggestion to leave the farm and move in with her daughter's family in France, Nives suffers debilitating loneliness until she brings Giacomina, a chicken, into the house for company. Then Giacomina becomes paralyzed, and panicky Nives calls old acquaintance Loriano Bottai for veterinary advice. Once Bottai's wife, Donatella, rouses the alcoholic vet and goes to bed, Nives and Bottai settle in to what becomes a verbal marathon. Their argument about the chicken's condition leads to banter about Donatella's snoring, so loud Nives can hear it over the phone. When Bottai mentions that his upstairs neighbor, Pagliuchi, hears Donatella too, the banter becomes gossip about Pagliuchi's long-ago youthful affair with Rosa, a girl who threw herself from the church belfry. Nives ponders what it must be like for Pagliuchi, "living with death on [his] conscience," but reveals that she, as well as Donatella, had problematic relationships as an adolescent with both Pagliuchi and Rosa. While Nives talks in concrete terms about Rosa's ghost cursing them, Bottai sees Rosa as a metaphor for "that thing we all have, which sometimes keeps us awake at night"--a night Bottai and Nives are sharing as they bring up one "Rosa" after another whom they hurt or were hurt by. The two are by turns friendly and hostile, with each revelation shifting who dominates the conversation. Then, midway through, Nives declares that part of her was "massacred" more than 30 years ago, and it becomes clear that Nives and Bottai are each other's main "Rosas," cursed with love, resentment, vengeance, cowardice, and guilt. A slim, sharply pointed knife of a novel. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.