Selby Green tries to change her life, but finds she cannot control the events that take her life and turn it inside-out. Edmund Eben's life is changed by war and politics, he thinks, but women exert the most significant, moving shifts in him. Whether these two people ever meet is up to how successfully they disappear from their ordinary existence.
How to Disappear is a heart wrenching, heartwarming novel in two parts, which links the lives of a disappointed woman living a grey existence and a man whose harsh migrant experience does not prepare him for love.
“The stark, poetic language ... is mesmerizing and convincing.” Lissa V. Fairbairn
This author's latest release is Pledges of Loyalty, the latest in the Denisthorn Hall series.
Rosanne Dingli has authored fifteen novels, six story collections, five novellas, and her collected poems. She has had numerous articles, stories, reviews, columns and poems published Australia-wide and on the internet since 1986. She has worked as teacher, lecturer, workshop coordinator, magazine and corporate editor, travel consultant, cook, manuscript assessor, heraldic artist and business partner. Originally from Malta, she has travelled widely in Italy, the UK, Turkey, Greece, South East Asia, Holland, Belgium, and France as well as most Australian states. She lives in Western Australia with her partner Hugo Bouckaert, Belgian GIS expert, biologist and philosopher.
Books:
According to Luke Death in Malta Fascinating Trickster The Hidden Auditorium The White Lady of Marsaxlokk Counting Churches - The Malta Stories All the Wrong Places (poetry) The Astronomer's Pig The Day of the Bird How to Disappear A Funeral in Fiesole The Frozen Sea The Cartographer of Venice A Place in Society A Suitable Husband Maids and Mistresses Pledges of Loyalty Petals & Pages Vertical Hold Two The Geography of Solitude Chance and Necessity: A novel of Narrogin and Williams
How to Disappear, a novel in two parts by Rosanne Dingli is a very enticing read. The author knows how to grab the readers attention early on and the grip is tight all the way through. She has a way with words. There is a poetic quality to her writing that I find fascinating and alluring. Very unique. An artistic flair with a hint of sarcasm and darkness. Maybe more than a hint which added to the mystery. Poignant and sharp as a razor blade.
I was moved by the truth and honesty in this narrative. Has a very theatrical vibe to it. The repetitions were symbolic to a pain so deep. I was lured in. Mesmerized by the originality and the utter despair that was displayed around every corner. An interesting way to convey emotion and yet it did strike a chord. Lured me in deeper. With each brush stroke, this becomes a piece of art all its own. Meaningful, cynical and with great depth.
Quote ~
He took a pen from his pocket and bit off the cap. Crooked front tooth. Determined eyes. Took her hand, gently, from where it gripped the table edge, and wrote a long number on her skin, starting where her thumb ended, digging the point in near a raised blue vein. 'My mobile. Unless I hear otherwise, I'll be outside, just right there, at seven thirty, tomorrow. Just after dark, it'll be. Now write yours.’