‘I stand on the threshold of the house.’
After her marketing company fails, Adrienne leaves Sydney for the olive grove established by her maternal grandparents left to her by her recently deceased father. She and her daughter Lauren, with the assistance of local Joy Oldfield, start cleaning the house. In conversation with Joy, Adrienne is surprised to learn that her mother Isabella also had a sister, Rosanna. This story, set in the present, is one of two threads.
The second story, opening over fifty years earlier, is the story of Adrienne’s father Jack, of Isabella and Rosanna. The two threads come together by the end of the novel. And, while aspects of the story are predictable, it is the way Ms Hampson tells the story that held my attention. Adrienne (not immediately likeable) had a distant relationship with her father, and memories that her mother was never happy. Initially, Adrienne intends to return to the corporate world in Sydney, but life on the olive grove (and some of the locals) change her mind.
Both threads held my attention. The challenges faced by Italian migrants during the 1950s made life more difficult for the Martino family as Franco, Adriana and their daughters sought to establish themselves. Jack, a much less demonstrative man, is occasionally embarrassed by the Martino family’s display of emotions.
In the present, Adrienne gradually moves from mourning her losses to appreciating both her new life on the olive grove and learning more about her family.
Yes, there is a happy ending.
A friend has been recommending Ms Hampson’s books to me for some time. This was her first and reading it has made me keen to read more.
Jennifer Cameron-Smith