From the moment Marilyn meets Bruno on the Dorset cliffs in 1965, you just know this story is going to stay with you. Marilyn, a young aspiring artist with dreams far beyond her small-town life, longs to break free from the expectations placed on her – a secretary, a wife, a mother. She wants more. And when Bruno, an intriguing Italian, appears in her life, everything shifts.
Fast-forward 53 years and we meet Lily, Marilyn’s daughter, whose relationship with her mother has always been strained. Lily adored her father, but Marilyn? She was distant, always lost in her own world, more at home in her studio than with her family. Their estrangement is painful and real. But when Lily gets the call that her mum is ill, she returns home, unsure of what she’ll find.
What unfolds is deeply moving. In Marilyn’s final days, Lily offers a tender kind of care. And after her death, the discovery of a photograph – a baby girl named Josephine – sets Lily on a journey to Italy in search of answers. What she finds in Perlarosa is unexpected and beautifully complex.
Josephine doesn’t exactly welcome Lily with open arms – she’s fiery, guarded, and reluctant to revisit the past. But there’s something between these two women, a connection that grows stronger with each page. I loved watching their relationship develop. Calm, thoughtful Lily and passionate, headstrong Josephine – such different characters, yet they bring out the best in each other.
I loved the shifting narration. It gives the story so much depth, allowing you to really understand the characters, their decisions, and the consequences that ripple through time. There’s so much emotional weight here – regrets, lost love, hope, healing – and yes, I cried (Chapter 51, Camogli… that bench… I was a wreck). The gift that Lily receives before leaving for England – such a fabulous way of showing that you know someone and of course an echo through the years. I loved this!
As always, Rosanna Ley’s writing is incredibly evocative. I could see the Bay of Poets, feel the breeze, hear the hum of village life. The Italian setting, the traditions, the history of Lerici – it all came alive. And all the relationships… so heartfelt, so real.
Rosanna Ley has once again delivered a story that lingers long after the final page. With rich characterisation, emotional depth, and a setting that feels alive, The Italian Flame draws you into its world completely. I was invested in every relationship, every twist, every quiet moment of reflection. It’s a novel full of heart, and I’ll be thinking about Lily and Josephine and their lives for a long time.