![]() Book cover | |
Author | Virginia Baily |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | Little, Brown and Company |
Publication date | 2015 |
ISBN | 9780316300391 |
OCLC | 900012212 |
Early One Morning is a 2015 novel by Virginia Baily.
In 1944 in Rome, Italy, a woman named Chiara Ravello rescues Daniele Levi, a Jewish child, before he is deported by the Nazis with his mother. In a flash-forward, Chiara lives alone in Rome in the 1970s and reflects on her life.
Reviewing it for The Guardian , Samantha Harvey described the novel as "incredibly sure-footed, a big, generous and absorbing piece of storytelling, fearless, witty and full of flair." [1] She added that it was "a surprisingly humorous novel, in which the characters are tenderly mocked or mock themselves". [1] In The Scotsman , Allan Massie suggested some passages "might with advantage have been shortened", but he concluded that the novel was "engrossing". [2]
However, in another review for The Guardian, Lucy Scholes suggested the conclusion was "a little flat". [3] In The Independent , Julie McDowall agreed with Scholes, writing that the "ending is tied up far too fast to be satisfying" [4] Reviewing it for The National , Clare Dight also criticized the end, arguing: "The reader’s most serious criticism will come on the last page, however, when the ink runs out before a final reckoning." [5] Meanwhile, in The Jewish Chronicle , Hephzibah Anderson regretted that Bailey did not write more about the Holocaust, and she concluded: "Baily's decision to look away from the horrors that she nonetheless exploits is a cop-out." [6]
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