One italian summer, p.21

One Italian Summer, page 21

 

One Italian Summer
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  Katy describes her mother as “the great love of [her] life.” How does their relationship change over the course of the novel?

  When Katy married young, Carol told her, “You have so much time. Sometimes I wish you’d take it.” How does this sentiment recur throughout the story?

  Katy finds herself in something of a time slip, as if she has “stumbled into some kind of magic reality where we get to be together. That time here does not only move slower but in fact doubles back on itself.” How does time operate in this novel? Why do you think the author made the choices she did to allow Katy and her mother to take their trip to Positano in the end?

  Observing Carol, Katy understands that she is “watching her becoming.” How does the Carol in Positano differ from the one Katy presented as her mother at the beginning of the book? Do you see glimpses of a younger Carol in the one the reader only hears about?

  Positano itself acts as a character in the novel, “full of very real magic.” What makes Positano distinctive? What is its draw for each of the characters, both locals and tourists?

  A large subplot focuses on the struggles of Hotel Positano and Italy itself, a place out of “some era that is unmarked by modernity.” What did you think of Adam’s plan to purchase the hotel? How do the local characters interact with Adam, Carol, and Katy?

  Adam admits that he’s “really good at travel and less good at what happens when you stand still.” How do each of the characters grapple with their own restlessness?

  Reflect on how mythmaking—in reference to Capri’s rocks of Faraglioni and the Amalfi Coast’s Path of the Gods—plays a role in this novel, especially in Katy’s relationship with her mother.

  In Katy’s final interaction with Carol as a young woman, Carol asks, “Did I leave you?” and Katy responds, “No, you never did.” What was your reaction to that scene?

  Much of this novel is about belonging—where and if we belong to whom. Katy notes at the end of the novel that “I do not belong to anyone.” Does that ring true to you?

  What did you think about the two major twists toward the end of the novel—one about Katy’s mother and one about time? Did either of those surprise you?

  Enhance Your Book Club

  Celebrate One Italian Summer with an Italian-inspired feast. Bring pasta and pesto, calamari, and don’t forget the Aperol spritz!

  Bring in a photo of a mother figure in your life. Share any stories you have of her as a young woman with your group.

  Visit rebeccaserle.com to learn more about the author and the inspiration behind this book.

  A Conversation with Rebecca Serle

  This novel is dedicated to your own mother. What made you want to tackle a mother-daughter story?

  My mother is truly the great love of my life, and my greatest fear is her dying. This book is part love letter to her and part love letter to my future self—the one who will have to live in this world without her. To me mother-daughter stories are extremely intimate, rich, heartbreaking, and challenging. Our mothers are our first blueprint of love, but they are also people. So many of my readers have lost their mothers or have challenging or nonexistent relationships with them. I want to pay tribute to how we honor this very deep connection, and then also how we break away. Because we must.

  Some early copies of In Five Years and One Italian Summer arrived with a pack of tissues. How do you create these emotional, wrenching moments that speak to a wide swath of readers?

  I try to write the truth, as I feel it. If my books touch people and I can say to them: “Yes, that thing you feel? I’m going to name it. I feel it, too”—that’s a beautiful connection. Tears are not bad, you know? They don’t always convey sadness. They are just an expression of emotion.

  All of your novels start with a compelling question: which five people, dead or alive, would you invite to dinner; where do you see yourself in five years; what if you knew your mother as a young woman. Where does your inspiration come from?

  If you’re asking where the conceits of my books come from, they come from a theme I want to explore—usually that’s the dialogue between fate and free will. How much is in our control, really, in life? I’m not sure if I come to the same answer every time or if the answers vary. Sabrina (The Dinner List), Dannie (In Five Years), and Katy (One Italian Summer) are all very different people with very different lessons to learn. But they are all, probably, facets of me. I see writing as a kind of communion—with the universe, my intuition, whatever you’d like to call it. It’s a magical process by which I get to tap into something beyond me, and come back with the words to show other people what’s there.

  A lot of this novel is about grief, and how Katy is able to move forward after her mother’s death. Grief is a theme that shows up in a number of your novels. What draws you to that subject matter?

  Andrew Garfield recently said about the death of his mother, “Grief is unexpressed love,” and I think that’s it. I write love stories. There is grief in love stories, because of course there is. I’m also interested in probing the seam of the human experience—the very edge. I write about things I’m afraid of, maybe.

  Why did you decide to set this book in Positano? Given that the setting is so vivid, what kind of research did you do?

  In the summer of 2019 I took a trip to Italy with my mother. She and I spent a week in Rome, and we got to meet her ex love from when she was twenty years old! She always talked about how special Positano was to her and how much she loved it. When I went back, I understood why. I had no plans to write a novel set in Italy, but on my last day in Positano I took photographs of every street sign. That’s how I knew eventually I would want to tell this story.

  This novel is coming out at a very different time than your last (the week the pandemic began to shut down the US), and this book features a time slip. Did the events of the past couple of years have anything to do with that choice?

  Honestly, no. I didn’t even know that I was writing this book in a different time until Katy realizes it. We literally uncovered that at the exact same time! It worked out, I guess, but it was not intentional.

  I started One Italian Summer in April of 2020. I wanted to travel somewhere and live in a world filled with salt air and hugs and lots of fresh tomatoes. It is my sincerest hope that this book will bring that same sense of escape to my readers.

  You’ve spoken before about the question of fate or free will in your novels. At the end of the book, Katy realizes that her mother has to make her own choices. How has this theme continued to resonate in your work?

  It is the central question of the human experience I am most interested in. I am probably tormented by trying to determine what I can control in life. I have this sense I can stop bad things from happening if I just do it “right.” I think a lot of people can relate to that. But it’s not, of course, a fair way to go through life. Life is going to happen. I think what I keep coming back to is that how we react to what happens is what really matters.

  What was your favorite scene to write and why?

  I loved writing this entire book. I really mean that. I enjoy writing in general, and this book was particularly special, given the time in which it was written. But the final scene of Katy and Carol is probably my favorite.

  The process from first draft to publication is a long one. Were there any major changes or revisions you didn’t foresee?

  I am twelve years into this career and I am lucky to now have a team that trusts my process. They push me when I need to be pushed but they always read my books on their own terms. For now, in where I’m at in my professional journey, my first draft really has to sing for the book to work. I’ve never had a book published where the first draft really didn’t work. Because of this, my editorial process is about broadening the scope, adding details, rounding it out. The plot does not often change in a meaningful way.

  What are you working on next?

  A love story. Would you expect anything else?

  More from the Author

  In Five Years

  The Edge of Falling

  When You Were Mine

  About the Author

  Rebecca Serle is the New York Times bestselling author of In Five Years, The Dinner List, and the young adult novels The Edge of Falling and When You Were Mine. Serle also developed the hit TV adaptation of her YA series Famous in Love. She is a graduate of USC and the New School and lives in Los Angeles. Find out more at RebeccaSerle.com.

  SimonandSchuster.com

  www.SimonandSchuster.com/Authors/Rebecca-Serle

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  Also by Rebecca Serle

  In Five Years

  The Dinner List

  Young Adult

  Truly Madly Famously

  Famous in Love

  The Edge of Falling

  When You Were Mine

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  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2022 by Rebecca Serle

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information, address Atria Books Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.

  First Atria Books hardcover edition March 2022

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  Interior design by Yvonne Taylor

  Cover design by Laywan Kwan

  Cover illustration by Henry Sene Yee

  Author photograph © Ann Molen

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Serle, Rebecca, author.

  Title: One Italian summer : a novel / Rebecca Serle.

  Description: First Atria Books hardcover edition. | New York : Atria Books, 2022.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2021035522 (print) | LCCN 2021035523 (ebook) | ISBN 9781982166793 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781982166816 (ebook)

  Subjects: BISAC: FICTION / Women | FICTION / Friendship | LCGFT: Novels.

  Classification: LCC PS3619.E748 I83 2022 (print) | LCC PS3619.E748 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021035522

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021035523

  ISBN 978-1-9821-6679-3

  ISBN 978-1-9821-6681-6 (ebook)

 


 

  Rebecca Serle, One Italian Summer

 


 

 
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