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Back to Delphi
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Back to Delphi
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Back to Delphi
Ebook351 pages5 hours

Back to Delphi

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

Linos has been granted a five-day furlough from prison, where he is serving a life sentence for murder. His mother ha decided to take him to Delphi. A few days spent in that magical place, she thinks, might distract him from his awful fate. She also hopes that this brief time together might be a chance for them to repair what has become a damaged relationship. To that end, she has a difficult revelation to share with her son: ten years earlier, it was she who led the police to him; she is responsible for his arrest and imprisonment. Over the course of five days, as mother and son watch the magnificent ruins of Delphi, matters concerning Linos's childhood that have been buried for decades resurface. This ambitious and magnificent work of literary fiction is a return to the origins of Greek tragedy, a story about guilt and innocence, about the monsters that lurk even in everyday life, and about the complex relationship between mothers and their sons.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 1, 2013
ISBN9781609451097
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Back to Delphi

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Rating: 3.6666666666666665 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The writing in this book -- sentence level, richness of metaphor and characterizations -- is crazy good. Greek novelist Ionna Karystiani does an admirable job of putting her readers inside her two characters' minds. The problem is that those two minds are very dark places to spend much time. As the novel begins, Viv, a widow, has just picked up her grown son for a 5-day furlough from his prison cell. (This occurrence is presented without comment, leading me to believe that such furloughs are common practice in Greece.) Through flashback, we begin to learn about the events that have brought them to this spot, and why the relations between them are so strained. Stated briefly, the novel is about the ways in which Viv, unhappy since childhood, has unintentionally but indelibly impressed her own despair and fear of life upon her son, and about the consequences of that dynamic. It's not a question of evil, here, and there is a strong and sincere, if difficult, bond between parent and child, and one of the persistent themes is the struggle to attain a level of hope amidst unhappiness. The writing, as I said, is thrilling, and the people come alive. It's just that this is a hard world to spend time in. If that seems even remotely your cup of tea, though, I heartily recommend this book.