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The Light in the Piazza

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THE BOOK HAS TWO NICKS TO THE HARD COVER NO DUST JACKET THE BOOK HASN'T BEEN READ FIRST EDITION

110 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1960

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1196 people want to read

About the author

Elizabeth Spencer

111 books57 followers
Elizabeth Spencer was an American writer. Spencer's first novel, Fire in the Morning, was published in 1948. She has written a total of nine novels, seven collections of short stories, a memoir (Landscapes of the Heart, 1998), and a play (For Lease or Sale, 1989). Her novella The Light in the Piazza (1960) was adapted for the screen in 1962 and transformed into a Broadway musical of the same name in 2005. She is a five-time recipient of the O. Henry Award for short fiction.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 84 reviews
Profile Image for Lizzie.
689 reviews115 followers
January 19, 2018
Like a lot of people, probably, I was unaware of this author until 2005 when this story was chosen for a theatrical adaptation, and now it’s a relatively famous musical. That year I went to see a talk at Lincoln Center in New York with Elizabeth Spencer (the author) and Adam Guettel (who wrote the musical). She was small and elderly and very quiet, and she could hardly believe what was happening to her little book that was no longer even in print.

I knew then, hearing her speak about her story, that it would be a lovely novella and I would enjoy reading it one day. It is still so nearly out of print (though seems to currently be packaged in this academic anthology), and eventually I did get this used copy that came with the world’s finest bookmark.

But it took me until I finally planned a trip to Florence, Italy before I took it down from the shelf and turned the pages. A wisp of a novel, it could be read extremely quickly, but I managed it in little pieces as we traveled. On the sofa in our holiday home near the Accademia where David resides, marking notes where we’d seen the same bridges and churches as we wandered through Firenze. Finally finishing in the dark further on our journey, in bed in Sicily with my phone on my chest to cast light, shivering on the side of a mountain.

I love literature for travel, books that share the street with you, put words to the scene from another moment, conjuring a secret experience in you as you look around as if you lived it in another life. I live with someone who always wants to read books of history for the places we travel, but I always want to read novels.

In mid-December nearly sixty years after it was written, my tourist experience couldn’t quite match that of Clara and her mother Margaret very well. They are lost in a summer haze of heat and sun-baked architecture and money, drifting in an open-ended tour of Italy from which they don’t ever really need to go home. Their life in America, which appears so prettily buttoned up with their fine family and excellent home and respectable friends, is really a series of escapes. Dodges, maybe, around Margaret’s permanent buzz of anxiety about Clara’s relationship to the world.

The affliction that has defined Clara is intentionally vague — a head injury, once, that altered her. How much did it change? Was it ever going to be different for her? We only have her mother’s version of their history and what we can see in front of us, this summer, in Italy. Margaret’s life is devoted to protecting Clara from awkward harm, things that others will be unaware will upset her, and yet to her credit she is also constantly embattled with this reality. Can’t Clara be normal, anyway? Can’t she live well some other way? Their family has vacillated between pretending there are no problems with their life and keeping Clara away from everything that makes life up.

Margaret as much as admits that they came to Italy to avoid a stickiness with a man Clara began to befriend back home. She may call her a child still, but she knows. And here they find themselves now: Margaret blazing Clara through a well-organized route of art, shopping, and cafes; and Clara practically photosynthesizing in the Tuscan sun. Here, Margaret sees, Clara works. She learns Italian to fluency, she fits the fashion to perfection. She brings no negative attention whatsoever. When her mother isn’t directing her around, she is budding and bubbling, and promptly attracts a persistent, darling boy.

What is so good about this story is that it takes very little time for Margaret to notice exactly what is going on. When Fabrizio will not go away — and when Clara will not go away from him — she has a reckoning. If I step back, she wonders, is it possible that this is actually going to turn out fine? Or am I dreaming?

She’s so sad, going through this alone, keeping herself collected (because, where she comes from, that’s just what you do) but privately bearing down on an entire motherhood of built-up grief and tension. Getting to know her, you understand that she can go either way on this one, there’s so much baggage on both sides. But we watch her, and we see which thing she wants more. And we want her to win.

I loved reading this, and I think the author deserves a little renaissance. She won multiple prizes and published many works and now seems to have only a smattering of quiet recognition. Note: she is still alive, at 96! And four years ago published a new story collection! Her writing is clever and wry, insightful and sad and vivid. This book is a perfection of concise storytelling and I’d recommend it to anyone. Most certainly, it’s going to remain on my shelf to share when we visit Florence again one day, a souvenir of another journey, and of ours.


.


Received a used copy of this from a reseller, with a souvenir photo from North Carolina Aquariums showing five teenage girls being dramatically eaten by a green-screen shark, stuck in as a bookmark before Chapter 8.



So many reasons to buy used books. <3
Profile Image for Mary.
476 reviews945 followers
October 5, 2021
This was a quick, absorbing, and atmospheric novella that made me ache to return to Italy (soon….soon).

Clara is 26 and summering in Florence with her mother Margaret when local lad Fabrizio takes an interest. Clara blooms while Margaret broods, conflicted and indecisive. The story takes place in Margaret’s tense interior world through the hazy, blinding light of the Ponte Vecchio, the crowds, the sounds, the sun, the disorientation of the piazzas and young love.

I was 27 when I went to Italy and it wasn’t summer and I didn’t fall in love with an Italian shop owner. I don’t have a daughter so I’ll never watch her fall in love in Florence (it must be amazing to fall in love in Florence!), and I’ll never make a decision like Margaret did. It was selfless and selfish. She’ll be haunted and she’ll be free.

He would grow quiet at last, and in the quiet, even Margaret Johnson had not yet dared to imagine what sort of life, what degree of delight in it, they might not be able to discover (rediscover?) together. This was uncertain. What was certain was that in that same quiet she would begin to miss her daughter. She would go on missing her forever.

I will return to Florence and I won’t be so young, but I won’t be too old either. It’ll be autumn. Covid will be something that used to happen to us. The Duomo will still be there. Florence suits melancholy and Clara’s wide-eyed life-is-about-to-start joy. Florence suits me and it suits Margaret’s sorrow and loneliness. I want my husband to see Florence. I want to read this again right before I go back. Soon…soon.

Nobody with a dream should come to Italy. No matter how dead and buried the dream is thought to be, in Italy it will rise and walk again.
Profile Image for Susan Molloy.
Author 150 books88 followers
May 1, 2023
✔️Published in 1960.
🖊 My review: an outstanding short story! The main plot solidifies the idea that there is someone for everyone, the “You were made for me, I was made for you” concept. Then there is the decision a wife makes without the blessing of her husband and her liberation (another plot line). It was a sacrifice, without question. Finally, it is a story of two cultures meeting and merging.

The short story is a fast read, and it can be read in one easy sitting. The 1962 movie by the same title, lifts much of the dialogue from the book, and it does follow the plot well. Also, I enjoyed the smattering of Italian throughout; it was a good refresher for me.

⭐️ I cannot imagine this story as a musical, but it is that, too, in another incarnation. My cousin, Lucy Schaufer, played and sung the part of Margaret Johnson in the European première, and there is my connection to this— as reviewed here in this article published in The Guardian on 6 May 2009. More insight to the musical version can be found here in this podcast.

The 🔥 dénouement is optimistic and rebellious, and 🖋 the writing style is intelligent. 📌 Would I read this again? Yes, I would.
🤔 My rating 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

🔵 Media form: Internet Archive .
✿●▬●✿●✿●▬●✿
Profile Image for Iva.
793 reviews2 followers
January 19, 2024
Lovely novella that shows off Spencer's talents as she shares views of Italy in the 60s. All characters are Italians or Americans of wealth and privilege. The story explores a romance where the parents have almost full control. There was a movie but this version is a little gem.
1,887 reviews50 followers
January 4, 2014
This short book from 1960(some describe is a novella) is written from the point of view of Margaret Johnson, a well-preserved middle-aged American lady who is making a leisurely visit of Italy, together with her beautiful daughter Clara. When the handsome Fabrizio starts courting Clara, Margaret feels terribly conflicted : should she tell him and his rather inquisitive family that Clara's apparent innocence is really due to a cognitive arrest incurred as a result of a fall of a horse when she was 10 years old? Should she stop this budding romance in its track? But Margaret feels strangely paralyzed, partially because she has fallen under the spell of Italy, and partially because she wants her daughter's happiness - and Clara wants Fabrizio. Her husband, back in North Carolina, isn't much help, since he pretty much washed his hands of his daughter since her deficiencies became apparent. But Margaret, usually such a pliable wife, cannot obey her husband's wish to Clara's marriage to what he believes is a fortune hunting, untrustworthy Italian who - horror- is a Catholic to boot. After much waffling, Margaret decides to let the wedding take place. But during a preliminary visit to the wedding registry, Fabrizio's father takes a look at Clara's passport and abruptly stops the proceedings. He later explains that he cannot countenance a marriage between 26-year old Clara and his 20-year old son. Between Margaret mentioning that Clara will have a substantial dowry and Fabrizio reminding his father that he is actually 23 years old, the wedding does take place. The book ends with Margaret feeling herself shrink into invisibility, feeling that her role is at an end, and murmuring to herself that she did the right thing.

I think that this book is a small gem. The writing is wonderful, impressionistic. As other reviewers have noted, there are some stereotypes in how Italians and Americans are perceived (the former crafty, the latter energetic). But ultimately the main theme of the story is that of a mother who wants her daughter to experience all the possible joys of life, including that of love. Margaret is a mother first and foremost, and she has defied her lord and master on a number of occasions when it comes to Clara. One of the book's last musings is that Margaret hopes that the fact that Clara is no longer her responsibility will bring her (Margaret) and her husband closer together.

One of the attractions of the book to me was the veil of ambiguity that covered everything. Did Fabrizio's father really forget his son's age, or was the scene in the wedding office a ruse to extract a larger financial settlement? Was Clara's father really unable to travel to Italy because of pressing business concerns (the crooner who was to be the face of his cigarette company had been called before the Committee on Un-American Activities!) or was he just not that interested in the daughter he considered "damaged goods"?

This book can easily be read in a single setting, but it is a great little dose of good writing about a theme that is still as relevant today as in 1960.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Amber Ashton.
271 reviews
August 18, 2021
When I found out the local theater was going to put on this production I looked into the book so I could read the story first. I listened to an audiobook version and have to admit that the story made me a little uncomfortable.

I can totally relate to Mrs. Johnson wanting the best for her daughter and wanting her to live her life to the fullest.
Profile Image for Susan Dehn Matthews.
Author 2 books1 follower
October 3, 2014
I found this small treasure of a book at a farmer's market (!) where the local library had a "free books" display. Here was the story behind the Tony award-winning play that I have long-hoped to see. Amazingly, this small, 54 year old volume is a first-edition with an almost pristine dust jacket. It is also a book that I read quickly (less than 24 hours)and put down only for the obligatory meals and such. Still, the story lingers in the mind and calls you back at the first moment of opportunity. If you have had the pleasure of visiting Florence, Italy and are able to envision the Arno and Ponte Vecchio, the crowded streets, the Duomo, and piazzas of this timeless city, the story takes on an amplified dimension. As I recalled all of this, The Light in the Piazza became a vacation of the heart, while Margaret and Clara became my companions on the short journey. The quality of the prose is exacting and delightful, painting an atmospheric picture not only of the city, but of the interior worlds encompassed by the minds and hearts of mother and daughter.
Profile Image for Melissa Stahly.
4 reviews3 followers
March 16, 2011
I am about half way through The Light in the Piazza and it has proven to be a very quick read. I have to share this passage to show the wit in Elizabeth Spencer's writing: "Tea at the Naccarelli household revealed that the family lived in a spacious apartment with marble floors and had more bad pictures than good furniture." My only critique at the moment is that there is some conversation in Italian and I wish I would have brushed up in basic conversation Italian before picking up the book. Granted the copy I am reading is the first edition published in 1960, so I am not sure what current editions look like. Don't get me wrong, I love the hint of Italian language in the book. I just wish I knew the translation without picking up my Italian dictionary.

Tonight I finished reading the book and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Lisa.
943 reviews
June 27, 2017
I saw this movie on TCM, one of the 1960s movies. It was on Hoopla and a short read, so I added it as a light book to read while on the recent trip to Asia.

Profile Image for Sophie Bowns.
Author 17 books102 followers
May 30, 2022
It was good. I do think the story should’ve focused more on Clara and Fabrizio though, and less on Margaret.
Profile Image for Gina.
874 reviews10 followers
May 16, 2024
Honest admission: I read this in The Light in the Piazza and Other Italian Tales, which I abandoned!

The story is about an American woman and her child with a traumatic brain injury summering in Italy, and It suffers from the usual plight of short stories and novellas -- length. Somehow short stories and novellas either run too long or run too short.

This one ran a bit too long, and the writing was a challenge for me. At times the writing was beautiful, but too often it was laborious! Sentences ran on too long -- with numerous commas -- requiring me to re-read a second or third time to comprehend.

As I have said before, working as a technical writer and a marketing hack has made me a tad impatient and intolerant of meandering text.
Profile Image for Dave.
1,289 reviews28 followers
July 28, 2020
If you can leave the stereotypes alone, and imagine that Clara is developed more completely, you will enjoy this story. But it is distressingly easy to poke holes through it, little though I wanted to.

I have only heard selections from the musical (beautiful, BTW) , but I can’t help thinking that any librettist would fix the story, making it more conventional, but also more real. I wonder if that’s true.
Profile Image for Monica.
Author 6 books36 followers
June 3, 2024
Wow! I enjoyed that quick read. It’s s especially interesting to read the night before the Welty book club discussion of A Room with a View, about Florentine romance. And of course, ending with the vision of Perseus and Medusa, I’m thinking of Welty’s stories, too.
(Which Spencer do I read next?)
Profile Image for Catherine Goode.
241 reviews6 followers
Read
February 16, 2024
Read for role prep! I like the musical adaptation of the story better than the novella itself, though that could be because I was familiar with the former first.
Profile Image for Gina House.
Author 3 books126 followers
June 8, 2024
4.5🌟 A surprising small gem of a book!

I found this vintage edition at a local library book sale for only a few dollars. I primarily bought it because of the lovely dust jacket. It looked so intriguing! After posting a photo of The Light in the Piazza on my Bookstagram account, I realized that some of my book friends had really liked this book and also loved the movie adaptation.

The story begins in Florence, Italy with a mother (Mrs. Margaret Johnson) and her daughter, Clara entering a piazza on a June evening. After that, you follow their story through small, everyday encounters and conversations—mostly through the eyes (and mind) of the mother.

Elizabeth Spencer's writing style is simple and spare, but in the most exquisite and interesting way. I couldn't help but become completely immersed in their experiences and I was spellbound until the end.

I don't want to say more and ruin the story, but it's truly a novel worth reading. The story is still stuck in my mind and I'm very much looking forward to watching the 1962 movie starring Olivia de Havilland, Rossano Brazzi, Yvette Mimieux, George Hamilton and Barry Sullivan.

Very glad that this book found its way into my life!
Profile Image for Tracy.
393 reviews28 followers
July 14, 2009
I'm not exactly sure why I avoided Elizabeth Spencer as long as I did. (Also I'm not sure why it took me so long to read this 100-page book. I blame that small person I live with.) It turns out that she is kind of good in a quiet way. Lots of unexpected turns of phrase settled among comfortable 50s prose. Does that make any sense? Not really. Sorry.

Profile Image for John.
256 reviews11 followers
December 18, 2007
A delightful read and basis for one of my favorite musicals of all time. I highly recommend this!
Profile Image for Carolyn.
713 reviews
June 1, 2015
Short and interesting character study -- watching a mother rationalize her way into something unexpected -- but way too short to show any real consequences. I wanted the rest of the story.
Profile Image for Liz.
249 reviews
February 18, 2016
The writing is beautiful but I found the story disturbing.
Profile Image for Kiely.
516 reviews4 followers
March 17, 2021
“Nobody with a dream should come to Italy. No matter how dead and buried the dream is thought to be, in Italy it will rise and walk again.”

Florence is my favorite place in the world, and I am quite seriously on a quest to read every book about it in existence. Every day I dream of the cobblestone streets, the beautiful piazzas full of tourists, the gelato shops and the Medici sculptural legacy in the Loggia dei Lanzi. I had vaguely heard of this story / its musical adaptation before, but I’m so glad I finally read it. Spencer’s story is simple, and really sort of inconsequential, but the descriptions of my beautiful favorite city made up for a lot of it — I could perfectly follow where the characters went throughout the story through my mind-map of Florence :’) A lot of the story falls into that E. M. Forster-esque trap of “Italy” being an independent force to Anglo-American tourists, and the idea that it is a place where these traditionally reticent people can let their passions loose (see also: the quote at the beginning of the review; also, my review of Forster’s own WHERE ANGELS FEAR TO TREAD.) Luckily, I love reading about Anglo-American impressions of Florence, because otherwise I would have been really pissed off with these frankly incorrect assumptions about a country, a city, and a people who are so much more complex and beautiful than these writers would wish you to believe. (For the reality of Florence and it’s people as well as it’s tourists, please read Penelope Fitzgerald’s INNOCENCE, it’s excellent!)

Otherwise, this was a quick read and I enjoyed it. I think that Clara’s mental difficulties in the novel were not dealt with as sensitively as they could have been, but also this was written in 1960, so I guess I can’t expect too much. I don’t think this book is anything especially earth-shattering, except for Spencer’s descriptions of Florence, which soothed my soul a bit and really connected with me. Recommended as a quick read or if you’re in the mood to travel via novel in these pandemic times!!
Profile Image for Kathy Wallen.
128 reviews2 followers
November 22, 2024
November 21, 2024

This book does an excellent job of immersing us in the setting of Florence, Italy. I'll give it that. I was reading this book during my lunch period and I was so hungry and I was really craving spaghetti. Kudos for the setting.

I enjoyed this read overall, but once I finished the book, I thought a little more deeply and realized that hardly anything of substance happened. I initially picked up this book because the synopsis promised troubles with Clara's mental capacities, and yet that is hardly a problem at all in the novel. (Also, the synopsis said that she was mentally a twelve-year-old, yet in the text, it says ten-year-old. Odd.) We hardly get any details on the "freakish accident" that Clara suffered, and it certainly isn't a main plot point other than the fact that Mrs. Johnson has to always be around Clara.

I got to the end of the book and felt kinda stupid. It was like the book was trying to say something profound, yet it completely missed the mark for me. I mean, consider this line, right after Mrs. Johnson has gotten Clara Johnson and Fabrizio Naccarelli married (without the consent of her husband and with the disapproval of Fabrizio's father):
"I did the right thing," she said. "I know I did."

Signor Naccarelli made no reply. "The right thing": what was it?
That screams in your face, "LOOK AT ME! I'M PROFOUND!!!" Yet I just didn't get it. Wasn't it the right thing to do to get Clara and Fabrizio married before Clara's father arrives from America and puts an end to Clara's chance at happiness? And I couldn't tell if Mrs. Johnson and Signor Naccarelli were maybe in love or not. It felt really unclear.

I felt like this book needed to be longer and have a bit more to do with Clara's mental issues. I liked Clara and Fabrizio together, yet I didn't really see much of it since the story was told from the point of view of Clara's mother. But as a short novel, it was okay. Just nothing all that profound.
Profile Image for Dorothy Himberc.
96 reviews4 followers
June 25, 2022
Straightforward writing, easy to read in one day, paints a picture of being a tourist in Florence that scratches a little beneath the surface and allows for satisfying armchair travel.

I'd argue that it doesn't transfer well to the present day, and think that nowadays one would handle disability representation a lot differently and better. I also imagine that marriages nowadays are much less coordinated by family and also often considerably less impulsive.

Still it is a good pastiche, I suppose, of 1950s/60s gender roles and of American materialism as incarnated in the distant figure of Mrs. Johnson's husband. What I wasn't able to decide by the end of reading the book was whether the girlish and innocent affect of Clara is also presented to us by the author directly as a way to question 1950s/60s ideals of what a young woman was supposed to be, and her role in a marriage. ('The nurse and the maid will do everything for Clara; she doesn't need skill to be a housewife,' to paraphrase loosely, was a striking observation.)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Samantha Glasser.
1,769 reviews69 followers
June 26, 2025
While on vacation in Italy, a mother and her adult daughter meet a young man who flirts with Clara. Her mother is uncomfortable with the relationship in spite of his persistence because her daughter had a head injury that makes her behave like a child. The language barrier and difference in customs makes her begin to wonder if married life is possible for her daughter after all.

"They were rather remarkable flowers, Mrs. Johnson thought-- a species of lily apparently highly regarded here, though with their enormous naked stamens, based in a back-curling waxen petal, they had always struck her as being rather blatantly phallic... it had come to her to wonder then if Italians took sex so much for granted that they hardly thought about it at all, as separate, that is, from anything else in life."

This novelette was turned into a remarkable movie starring Olivia de Havilland, Yvette Mimieux, and George Hamilton.
Profile Image for Tim Nason.
300 reviews6 followers
October 6, 2020
The situation and setting bring to mind memories of reading Jane Austen and E.M. Forster's Room with a View and Henry James's Italian novels but the story has a much tighter focus than any of those writings and the prose is straightforward American English. The main character is a woman from Winston-Salem, North Carolina, whose intellectually-challenged but delightful adult daughter is courted by a young Italian man during the mother and daughter's visit to Florence. How the mother resolves this "impossible" romance carries the story along through a series of gentle trials and upsets; the characters are vivid and realistic, the dialog brisk and amusing. Oddly, I feel a sense of loyalty to the characters that is strong enough that I do not want to read other of Elizabeth Spencer's stories right away; I want to savor the lives of these good people a little longer.
Profile Image for Ivan.
801 reviews15 followers
August 6, 2017
I knew the story from having seen the musical years ago. Still the writing made this a worthwhile reading experience. There was a rather shocking surprise towards the end which I felt was handled brilliantly by the author - she didn't mislead us in any way, and in fact there were some clues along the way [time wasn't making sense to me] - it wasn't a loud "OMG", but rather a quiet "Oh, I see, yes that makes perfect sense." I am drawn to Florence and Venice (dream destinations) so the setting was an attraction, and the author's description of the city betrays her affection for Florence. This isn't on the same level as A Room with a View, but it's an engaging story well told.
Profile Image for Siena.
300 reviews49 followers
October 29, 2019
🌟3.5 stars🌟

Early this year, I was lucky enough to happen upon a signed copy of this book at Powell’s. I’d been looking for a copy for years, as this novella inspired one of favorite musicals, but it’s largely out of print, so I really feel fortunate to have a copy even if the book isn’t an all time favorite.

Overall, it’s not quite as good as masterful broadway adaptation, but still a nice, thoughtful little read.

Profile Image for David.
1,443 reviews40 followers
June 21, 2020
Interesting because of the Florentine setting — experience helps — but pretty inconsequential. More like a short story.

Only one character really developed— Mrs. Johnson. Atmosphere well done but perhaps that’s because I know what she was saying.

Ah — reading Goodreads reviews I see this has been turned into a successful musical, which is perhaps the only reason most people are reading and reviewing this!
Profile Image for McHess.
350 reviews
Read
August 4, 2025
A hazy, atmospheric story of love and the edges of capacity in life, in language, in overall intellect, and most of all, in love. It's bittersweet and hopeful as a mother who loves her daughter wants a future for her and also wants to protect her. But does she underestimate what a cognitively disabled person can do? Can love really make up for other lacks? What about the rigors of real life? Whether or not you think her mother made the right decisions is part of the pondering for the reader.
Profile Image for Sammi.
1,346 reviews82 followers
May 16, 2021
Another book -> musical that I was surprised about. I have never seen the show nor really paid much attention to the music, but I've heard SUCH amazing things. Going into this book I had no idea what this story was about, I just assumed it was a love story but it's also so much more.

I am now really intrigued to listen to the soundtrack and see how the story is told through music.
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