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The Villa: Escape to Sicily with the Number One Bestseller
The Villa: Escape to Sicily with the Number One Bestseller
The Villa: Escape to Sicily with the Number One Bestseller
Audiobook15 hours

The Villa: Escape to Sicily with the Number One Bestseller

Written by Rosanna Ley

Narrated by Anna Bentinck

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this audiobook

Set against the rugged coast of Sicily, debut novelist Rosanna Ley creates a lush multi-generational story in The Villa; an epic journey of love lost, family secrets, the road to self-discovery and the meaning of home and family.

When Tess Angel receives a letter informing her she has inherited the Villa Sirena, perched on a clifftop in Sicily--she is stunned. Her only link to the small beautiful island is through her mother, Flavia, who left Sicily during World War II and has not spoken to her family, or of her life there, since.

Initially resistant to Tess traveling to her home country, Flavia begins to recount her youth, told in flashbacks as she writes in a journal to Tess of her journey to independence, as well as leaving her legacy of cherished family recipes and secrets. Secrets including a lost treasure rumored to be hidden in the very Villa Tess is staying at.

Told in alternating points-of-view between Tess, Flavia, and Tess' teenage daughter Ginny, dealing with her blooming sexuality and filled with questions that she longs to ask her long-absent father.
(P)2014 WF Howes Ltd
LanguageEnglish
PublisherQuercus
Release dateMar 6, 2014
ISBN9781848667655
The Villa: Escape to Sicily with the Number One Bestseller
Author

Rosanna Ley

Rosanna Ley works as a creative writing tutor and has written many articles and stories for national magazines. Her writing holidays and retreats take place in stunning locations in Spain and Italy. When she is not travelling, Rosanna lives in West Dorset by the sea.

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Reviews for The Villa

Rating: 3.9285714571428567 out of 5 stars
4/5

21 ratings3 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Oct 23, 2014

    From the moment I browsed through the Kindle store and stumbled across this I just knew it was the book for me.

    Having inherited a villa in Scicily, from a man unknown to her--a man who was her mother's employer many years ago--Tess leaves England and goes to Scicily in search of answers; why did that man, Edward, leave the villa to her and not to her mother, Flavia? Why does her mother never speak of where she came from? What happened to her mother that she would want to abandon everyone and everything she ever knew to go to England?

    Tess falls in love with the place, but soon realises that within such beauty lies ugliness; beyond the navy blue sea, the shimmer of schools of fish in the ocean, and the scent of fruit-bearing trees, lies bitterness, greed, power and egotism--all packaged as tradition and family honour, of course.

    Tess's daughter, Ginny, remains in England with Flavia and, after finishing school, is practically traumatised by her inability to decide on what to do with her life. She is only sure of what she DOESN'T want: university. As if that pressure wasn't enough, her father, who abandoned her and her mother before Ginny was even born, turns up at her door wanting to be a part of her life--it may be eighteen years, but better late than never; or is it?
    This particular part of the story didn't really do anything for me, but perhaps someone of that age may be able to relate to it as I do recall those insecurities about life when I was eighteen.

    But for me, the real story here was Flavia's, Tess's mother: the headstrong woman who, as a girl, abandoned her family, her friends, her home and country in search of the man she loved, and in search of a better life. This was the story that captivated me and reminded me of a part of my own life. Her story seems honest, difficult, sometimes content but--in my opinion--simply unfair, just as life can be. But both her and Tess's story were those of intrigue and seduction and just as the characters fell in love, so too did I: with Scicily, with the food, with falling in love, and with the idea of living.

    A beautiful novel to leave you with beautiful thoughts and dreams. Thank you to the author for this creation. It has had such a wonderful impact on me.

    I'll have to check out other books by this author. Definitely recommend.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Aug 9, 2014

    As parents we all want our children to be healthy and happy in their lives and most of us have a sneaking suspicion that we know the route, or at least part of the route, to get there. But their lives are not our lives and we have to allow them to make their own decisions, mistakes, and triumphs. This is surprisingly hard to do, tied as it is to our own expectations as well as societal and cultural expectations. In Rosanna Ley's novel, The Villa, this is a strong theme throughout the story.

    Tess Angel is a single mother whose daughter, Ginny, is eighteen and about to fly the nest if she can ever figure out what she wants to do with her life. Tess works in an unfulfilling job where she is unappreciated and her lover is a married man but her life isn't all the stuff of cliche; she has the love and close support of her parents and a dear friend who lives next door. Her mother is Sicilian but Flavia never speaks of her past before coming to England so the only real connection Tess has to this half of her heritage is through food. When the novel opens, Tess has just received a letter informing her that she's inherited a villa in Sicily from a man she's met named Edward Westerman, the Englishman her mother's family worked for for so many years back home in Sicily. According to the terms of his will, she cannot dispose of the villa without first visiting it and when she tells her mother, Flavia is certain Tess should not go, certainly not to Cetaria to claim Villa Sirena, the place where Flavia grew up. But Tess cannot resist the pull and so she goes despite her mother's misgivings.

    Ginny, meanwhile, is floundering in her life. She doesn't want to go to uni but she has no other direction either. She is a sullen and deeply unhappy young woman. She is battling something internal that she calls "The Ball," a manifestation of her anxiety or fear or angst or unhappiness. Ginny sort of drifts in her life, hurt that her best friend has chosen to spend all her time with a boyfriend, only marginally interested in her own lackluster relationship, and at odds with her mother, wanting to reclaim their earlier ease with each other but driven, in the manner of teenagers, to lash out and push against Tess.

    As Tess spends first a week exploring her somewhat dilapidated home on a cliff overlooking the sea, and then a longer stretch of time trying to uncover her mother's past and the reason for her intentional reticence about Sicily, Flavia realizes that she must in fact tell Tess the story of why she left Sicily in the first place and why she refuses to go back or to discuss it at all, even if the remembering brings her pain. Choosing to write the story in small increments in a journal and to intersperse the narrative with the instructions for her beloved Sicilian cuisine, Flavia takes the reader back into the past to WWII Italy and into the long held family loyalties and feuds of Sicily.

    The narratives of all three women wind together although those of Tess and Flavia take center stage. As Tess tries of uncover her mother's past, Flavia pours out her closely guarded secrets to the journal she intends to give to Tess. Flavia's tale explains things that Tess, hundreds of miles away in Sicily, is experiencing but cannot possibly understand. She is drawn to mosaicist Tonino and a little leery of slick businessman Giovanni but she doesn't understand how they are connected to her through their families and how the accusations and fall out of simmering anger from so long ago survive to this day and wrap to include her, a woman who has never before stepped foot in Cetaria.

    The Sicilian setting is seductive and enticing. Ley captures the overwhelming beauty and intense passion of the place and also the undercurrents of darkness and danger running just below the surface of the sun drenched isle. Tess and Flavia are interesting and complete characters while Ginny is less so and their stories reflect that fact. There is never any doubt as to who the bad guy and who the good guy are in Tess' present day story and the other supporting characters and their relationships to the main characters are underdeveloped. Ley throws in a couple unearned convenient coincidences like Ginny's absentee father giving Tess money just when she most needs it, Lenny's last name being Angel after Peter called Flavia his angel, and a well-timed earthquake that allows Tess to finally put to rest all of the accusations and speculation of the past sixty or so years. Despite these easy plot choices, this was a nice summer read, chock full of issues of love, loyalty, and secrets. And in the end, both Flavia and Tess realized that while their daughters might make different life choices than they would, wanting the best for your child means allowing her to be the mistress of her own destiny. You just never know where that destiny might lead.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Oct 3, 2012

    Enjoyed this book. Light but very readable and well written.