Some writers that resonate with me the most came to me by chance. Francesca Marciano is one of them. I came across Rules of the Wild many years ago during a trip to Boston. I don't recall where the book was, but I know I didn't purchase it (oddly enough, another beloved writer, Joan Didion, came to me the same way: I found The Year of Magical Thinking in 2005 on a bookshelf in a tiny bed and breakfast in Tulum, Mexico - the book came home to New York with me ...). I started reading Rules of the Wild, and it immediately enraptured me. I then discovered that a new novel by the same author would come out shortly after. That was Casa Rossa, a novel that would become one of my all-time favorite books. I read and reread it in both Italian and English several times through the years. As an Italian living in New York City, feeling bicultural, it resonated with me. It's also written perfectly and cinematically (Marciano is also a screenwriter in Italy), evoking the 20th century in Italy in such a vivid manner I fell in love with the characters, the setting, the story, everything. I read everything she has published so far, and in each book, I find recurrent themes (the death of a parent, sisterhood, Greece in the summer, Kenya, Taos in New Mexico, Rome, of course).
The common thread in the stories in this collection is these raw emotions that flow through the characters, who are all at a pivotal point in their lives (each in different geographical regions, as it was with the previous story collection, "The Other Language," which I also really liked), and each story features an animal that, in a way, represents the emotion, often hidden within and from the character; these are somewhat primordial emotions that we all have but of which we're often unaware. I found the "animal" theme fascinating and enjoyed some stories more than others (The Callback, Indian Land, and Animal Spirit were the most poignant to me).
I gave it four stars because nothing can be as good as Casa Rossa.