Women in Sunlight: A Novel by Frances Mayes - Kindle
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Women in Sunlight: A NovelKindle

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Frances Mayes

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4.2

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3,541 ratings


The story of four American strangers who bond in Italy and change their lives over the course of an exceptional year, from the bestselling author of Under the Tuscan Sun.   Don’t miss Frances Mayes in PBS’s Dream of Italy: Tuscan Sun Special!

She watches from her terrazza as the three American women carry their luggage into the stone villa down the hill. Who are they, and what brings them to this Tuscan village so far from home? An expat herself and with her own unfinished story, she can’t help but question: will they find what they came for?

Kit Raine, an American writer living in Tuscany, is working on a biography of her close friend, a complex woman who continues to cast a shadow on Kit’s own life. Her work is waylaid by the arrival of three women—Julia, Camille, and Susan—all of whom have launched a recent and spontaneous friendship that will uproot them completely and redirect their lives. Susan, the most adventurous of the three, has enticed them to subvert expectations of staid retirement by taking a lease on a big, beautiful house in Tuscany. Though novices in a foreign culture, their renewed sense of adventure imbues each of them with a bright sense of bravery, a gusto for life, and a fierce determination to thrive. But how? With Kit’s friendship and guidance, the three friends launch themselves into Italian life, pursuing passions long-forgotten—and with drastic and unforeseeable results.

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ISBN-10

0451497678

ISBN-13

978-0451497673

Print length

464 pages

Language

English

Publisher

Crown

Publication date

March 04, 2019

Dimensions

5.16 x 0.99 x 7.97 inches

Item weight

11.4 ounces


Product details

ASIN :

B073P9Y1Z1

File size :

10725 KB

Text-to-speech :

Enabled

Screen reader :

Supported

Enhanced typesetting :

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Word wise :

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Editorial reviews

“Mayes once again paints a vivid portrait of her beloved Tuscany. I defy you to read her descriptions of blackberry crostata, rotisserie chicken or semolina gnocchi without wondering what’s on your own dinner menu tonight.” -- Washington Post

“Frances Mayes is back under the Tuscan sun, and the forecast for readers is bright. . . Italy isn’t the only place where the sun shines, but here it illuminates what’s truly important for these appealing characters, as they ‘va & torna,’ go and return.” -- USA Today

“Mayes’s writing about Italy is the next best thing to a plane ticket.” -- People Magazine

“The pleasurable descriptions of colors and tastes and various Italian tourist destinations, plus the poetry written by the writer character, the gardens planted by the gardening character, and the handmade paper made by the paper-making character, etc., are enough to keep this party going all year long.” -- Kirkus

"Whether in the South or in Italy, Frances Mayes takes us home to a lush, vivid landscape where all senses are engaged. Women in Sunlight, her compelling new novel, transports us emotionally as well, as we watch a cast of memorable women maneuver their lives through many transitions. This novel is a great exploration of process: of writing, of cooking, and most importantly, of living." -- Jill McCorkle, author of Life After Life

"Frances Mayes’s novel about the feasts and friendships of four American women in the Tuscan countryside is a joy for the senses and an awakening for us all to the possibilities in our lives. Women in Sunlight is one of those novels you’ll want to linger in, to leave open on your bedside table, to read each page again and again." -- Nancy Thayer, author of A Nantucket Wedding

“Frances Mayes has outdone herself. The writing is gorgeous, the structure grand and formidable, just like the architecture she writes about so well. I feel like I have lived in Italy. But most of all, I feel like these women—and their men, and children—are still walking around in my mind.” -- Lee Smith, author of Dimestore

“The beloved Frances Mayes seems to own the Italian sun. Her first Italian-set novel is a lovely and intimate journey of friendship, loss, and hope set in the eternal beauty of Tuscan countryside. All of Ms. Mayes signature insights are here…there is healing and forgiveness that only a sojourn to Italy can provide. Che bella!” -- Adriana Trigiani, author of Kiss Carlo

“Women in Sunlight is an illuminating novel that reveals the exotic charms of Italy, this time through the fresh eyes of three American women who must learn to let go of the past so they can embrace a new culture, new relationships and a second chance at life. Utterly delicious!” -- Mary Alice Monroe, author of Beach House For Rent

“Fans will be delighted that Mayes again puts them Under the Tuscan Sun, where American writer Kit Raine is now living….Sun and fun, food and friendship—you can’t go wrong.” -- Library Journal

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Sample

BY CHANCE, I WITNESSED THE arrival of the three American women. I’d been reading in my garden for a couple of hours, taking a few notes and making black dots in the margins, a way to locate interesting sentences later without defacing the book. Around four thirty on these early darkening days, some impulse toward dinner quickens, and I began to consider the veal chops in the fridge and to think of cutting a bunch of the chard still rampaging through the orto. Chard with raisins, garlic, and orange peel. Thyme and parsley for the tiny potatoes Colin dug at the end of summer. Since the nights were turning chilly, I put down my book, grabbed the wood-carrier from the house, and walked out to the shed to fetch olive tree prunings for the fireplace grill.

Yet another escape. I am putting off writing about Margaret, my difficult and rigorous friend, whose writing I admired. Oh, still admire, but this project feels more like trying to strike mildewed matches—I keep rereading instead of writing. I’ve read her Stairs to Palazzo del Drago a dozen times.

A book can be a portal. Each one I’ve written firmly sealed off one nautiline chamber (Is nautiline a word? Meaning pertaining to a nautilus?), and then opened into the next habitable space. Always before, my subjects chose me. I’m the happy follower of fleeting images that race ahead, sometimes just out of sight, of lines that U-turn and break like the downside of heartbeats. Isn’t boustrophedon the ongoing form of writing that mimics the turns an ox makes when plowing a field?

At times, writing conflagrates, a vacant-lot fire started by bad boys. That’s when I’m elated. But this time, I chose my friend as the subject. I feel as I did in college, slugging out a research paper on “The Concept of Time in T. S. Eliot’s Four Quartets.” I enjoyed the work but immediately felt humiliated by my limits.

I’m easily distractible. Those shriveled apples on the third terrace, still golden and dangling as brightly as in the myth of the three graces, lure me to make a galette. Fitzy has burrs in his silky hair and needs brushing. My own hair has turned unruly. I would like to have a few friends over for polenta with mushrooms and sausage, now that the funghi porcini are sprouting under every oak tree. My mind surfs over endless diversions.

When you’re propelled by a sense of duty, you’re easy to derail.

As I picked dried branches from the woodpile, I looked down from the upper olive terrace as Gianni, the local driver, turned sharply into the long drive of the Malpiedi place across the road, his white van crackling over dry stubble. Malpiedi—Bad Feet. I’ve always loved the Italian names that remind me of ones my friends and I adopted when we played Wild Indians in the vacant lot by my family’s house in Coral Gables. Wandering Bear, Deer Heart, Straight Arrow. One friend chose Flushing Toilet. But here it’s Bucaletto, Hole in the Bed; Zappini, Little Hoe; Tagliaferro, Iron Cutter; and stranger, Taglialagamba, He Cuts the Leg—maybe a butcher specializing in leg of lamb? Cipollini, Little Onion; Tagliasopra, Cut Above; Bellocchio, Beautiful Eye—how alive those names are.

Early in my years in Italy, fascinated by every syllable, I used to collect them. In hotels when there were telephone books, I’d read the names at night for the pleasure of coming upon Caminomerde, Chimney Shit—there’s a story there—and Pippisecca, Dry Pipe (or Penis); and Pescecane, Dog Fish. The sublime Botticelli? Little Barrel.

The Bad Feet were gone now. I attended the wake for Luisa, the wife, who had an erotically decorated cake at her last birthday—figures like those feasting frescoes from Pompeii in the Naples museum, where the phallus is so large it’s carried forth on a tray. Passing by their table in the restaurant where she was celebrating with friends, I was shocked to look down at the garish pink and green cake everyone was laughing over. After that, I was embarrassed when I saw plump, stoop-shouldered, rabbit-eyed Tito, her husband. She died of diverticulitis, some sudden rupture I couldn’t help but think was caused by too much cake, and Tito followed all too shortly. He did choke, but on pork arista, with no one around to perform the Heimlich. I try not to imagine his rheumy eyes popping out of their sockets. The daughter, Grazia, who snorts then brays when she laughs, painted some rooms, put in a dishwasher, and listed the house for lease before she went to live with her failing aunt in town. (I later learned that the rental terms included an option to buy after one year.) Grazia was not coming back to rattle around in the big stone house that was cool in the summer and cool in the winter. I missed them as neighbors. I even missed the years of Grazia’s squealing violin practice, Luisa’s piano, and Tito’s sax. Hours of sour notes wafting up the hill. We’d lived parallel lives on the same slope for eleven years, and then within six months the house stood empty, with the kitchen shutter banging in the night when the tramontana blew in from the Alps.

I’ve always loved their house—its big square self, rooted firmly on a long flat spur of our terraced hillside, and the great portone with sphinx-face doorknockers popular from the time Italy was ransacking Egypt. Over the door, the fanlight’s fanciful iron curls, twisted around the letter S, the initial, I suppose, of the person who built such a solid structure three hundred years ago. If you cut away the jasmine vines, you’d see VIRET IN AETERNUM, It Flourishes Forever. A prideful motto. The house’s name—Villa Assunta. Perhaps it was finished around the holiday Ferragosto, when the Virgin Mary assumed into heaven. Six big square rooms up, six down. Afterthought bathrooms but okay.

I would sometimes take Tito and Luisa a basket of plums when my trees were dripping with them. As their door swung open, a splash of light pooled on the waxed bricks. At the end of the hall I saw the great large-paned window full of splayed green linden leaves, and in winter angular black limbs like a dashed-off charcoal sketch.

DOWN IN THE OLIVE GROVE, I saw Gianni’s van weave in and out of sight. Through silvery trees, glimpses of white, scree of trees, flash of white. He descended the rough drive, pulling into the weedy parking spot beside the house, where Luisa often used to leave her blue Fiat Cinquecento ragtop open to the rain. I always wanted to use that image in a poem but it never fit.

Three women got out, hardly the three graces as they dragged carry-on bags and clumsy backpacks and totes. Gianni hauled out four mastodon-sized suitcases and struggled each one to the door. I couldn’t hear the women, who appeared to be exclaiming and laughing. I supposed they were here for an autumn vacation. There’s a certain kind of traveler who shuns the hectic summer months and arrives for the season of more solitude. I hoped they would not be noisy; sound travels in the hills. If their husbands are arriving and boozy dinners ensue, there could be chaos. Who are they? Not young. I could see that.

My own arrival here, Dio—twelve years ago, seems as vivid as yesterday. I stepped out of the car, looked up at the abandoned stone farmhouse, and I knew, what did I know? This is it. This is where I invent the future.

Could they be thinking the same? And Margaret, too, my subject, my lost friend, once arrived long, long before me at her golden stone house below the tower of Il Palazzone (big palazzo indeed), not knowing what life she might find. What she did find immediately was a huge, squealing pig left shut in the lower level by the farmers/former owners (peasants, she called them) as a gift.

Margaret was a firm exile, not like me, a come-and-go one, and in her embroidered slippers and Venetian black devoré velvet coat, nothing like these latest arrivals in magenta, orange, saffron puffy down jackets and boots.

The one in the electric magenta hoists a dog carrier out of the van’s rear door. She kneels and releases a small toffee-colored yapper that starts up right away running in circles around all of them, almost lifting off the ground with joy. So, I guessed, since they’ve brought a dog, they’re not here for a brief holiday.

Gathering more fire starter, I fell into sort of a reverie. Their gestures and movements below me seemed suddenly distant, a static tableau. Some latter-day illustration for a medieval book of hours: under a dapple-gray sky, the stalwart house catching late rays, stones gleaming as if covered with snail tracks; the windows’ mottled glass bouncing back the sunlight as mirror. Between Villa Assunta and me, elongated shadows of cypress trees stripe the village road. As if behind veils (for the afternoon light here turns to a pale, honeyed transparency), the slow-motion women walk toward the door, where Gianni fumbles with the iron key that used to hang by a tattered orange ribbon on a hook inside the door. I knew they’d soon inhale the old-book smell of the closed house. They’d step in and see that hall window back-blazed with golden linden leaves, possibly would stop to take in a breath. Oh, so that’s where we are. Why did tears sting my eyes?

Oh, Luisa, you never did get that craggy mole taken off your chin, never even plucked the coarse spike of hair that I weirdly had the impulse to touch. Too late; you are gone (what, a year?), and Tito, too, with his huge phallus or not, his meek smile, and now almost totally erased are the many seasons in the great old cucina with a fireplace big enough to pull up a chair, pour a smidgen of vin santo, and tell stories of the war, when many local men walked home barefoot from Russia. That flaky Grazia could have had the yard cleared up a bit. All gone. Gone with the Wind, the book I devoured in my early teens. Still a great title. (Margaret also via col vento.) What a sharp writer, la Margherita. What glinting eyes. I used to study her clean, clipped prose style. I like to use and because for me everything connects. She never used and because for her, nothing connected. In writing, you can’t hide who you are.

Over the years her work simply evaporated from public view, even Sun Raining on Blue Flowers, which had impressive critical attention and despite that still managed to appear on best-seller lists. Most of my writer friends never have heard of her. I feel compelled to reawaken interest in her few books, not that I have the power to secure her a place in the canon, if the canon even still exists.

ARRIVALS. ALL POTENTIAL. I REMEMBER mine, the black iron key the real estate agent Pescecane (yes, Dogfish) handed over after I signed the last paper, me walking through the empty rooms—counting them: eleven, most of them small. Four below once housed farm animals and still had enormous, smooth stone floors and a rime of fluffy white mold from uric acid. Upstairs the ceilings soared because there had been attics (long since collapsed) for grain and chestnut storage. I’d forgotten the dank cantina tacked onto the long kitchen and dining room wing. I remember the creak of the latch, then pushing open the shutters, the view pouring in like grace received. Casa Fonte delle Foglie, fountain of leaves. Maybe that’s why I fell for it, that poetic name scrawled on the oldest local maps. Apt for my leafy plot of olive, linden, ilex, and pine layered around a curve of hillside. I’d only seen the inside once and didn’t even remember the two upstairs fireplaces, or the sagging beam in the kitchen. Not mouse skeletons in the pantry. My house from the outset seemed mine. I literally rolled up my sleeves and set to work.

What the three women are seeing now—will it imprint forever, or will it slowly fade once the vacation ends? Like that house I rented one July in the Mugello north of Florence—the vintage fridge formed such an igloo that the door wouldn’t close. If you touched the handle you got an icy shock. I can’t picture the bedrooms at all, but I remember decades-old Christmas cards and

christening invitations in the sideboard drawer. Memory has shut the doors all the way down a long hall. Only one stands open at the end, an empty white room with white pigeon dung in a line on the floor under a rafter. Who snatches up their roots and roosts in a foreign country where they have no people? I did. Margaret—well, she was born to roam. “Now you can never go home,” she used to threaten.

But you can go home; it’s not drastic, that is until you’re not sure where home is. How many hopefuls have I seen arrive and begin life here only to wake up one day—after the restoration, after the Italian class (I thought Italian was supposed to be easy), after the well gone dry, after the boozy lunch-after-lunch with others who speak little Italian, after stone-cold winter—and think, What in hell am I doing here?

Even so, powerful propulsions drive us. Drove Margaret, drove me. In the Florence train station, arrival signs flash right next to the enticing departures. Treni in arrivi, treni in partenze, one suggesting the other. (I still want to board every one.) Margaret abandoned her Casa Gelsomino, Jasmine House. Long her destiny, then not. Two summers she returned, staying with us. By that time, she was critical of Italy, and one night when her patience snapped she said to me, “You’re like a child. Naïf. Perpetually astonished.” I said nothing. She’d ripped into me once before.

Colin chided her. “Oh, Margaret, you know that’s bullshit. Kit sees all.” And he poured her a shot of grappa to end the evening.

“Italy’s an old country. That, at least, you know. Babies are born old here. That you don’t know.” She threw back the grappa in a gulp, looked wide-eyed for a moment, and said, “Buona notte.”

And these three, just choosing their bedrooms and flinging their luggage on the bed, just noticing that these Tuscan manses have no closets, just a cavernous, creaky armadio in each room. What brings them to Luisa’s stern villa? Is the end of their story already embedded in the beginning? Eliot’s in the beginning is my end exasperated me as a college junior. How dreary, I thought then, but now, I do wonder, when and how will my time here come to an end? Fate, too propitious a word—but what red thread connects an unforeseeable end to the day I arrived in a white sundress, opened the door, threw up my arms, twirled around—to the surprise of the agent—and shouted, I’m home.

WALKING TO THE HOUSE, BASKET of sticks in hand, last rays of sun exploding in molten splotches on the lakes out in the valley, an armful of chard, sprigs of thyme and rosemary in my pocket, Colin waving from the front door, Fitzy springing after a copper leaf spiraling toward the grass, Stairs to Palazzo del Drago left on a lawn chair, Gianni beeping, mouthing buona sera, signora as his van freed of passengers speeds by, a little music—Lucio Dalla?—drifting from my house, there, like that, the subject chose me.

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About the authors

Frances Mayes

Frances Mayes

Frances Mayes's new novel A GREAT MARRIAGE (2024) tells the story of spirited Dara Willcox, a runaway bride, and of Austin Clarke, whose life must be reinvented after a shattering event. The aftershocks rattle the lives of three generations of women and men, causing an examination of the great mystery ride that is marriage and what it means when it's great, good, or time for the end.

(2023) PASTA VELOCE, 100 fast pasta recipes, was published, following (2020) ALWAYS ITALY, an intensive guide to the twenty regions of Italy. This won the SATWF Lowell Thomas Gold Medal Award, the Best Travel Book from NA Travel Journalists' Association, and for the German edition, The ITB Berlin Book Award.

Always attuned to the lure of travel and the equal pull of home, Frances explores both interests in A PLACE IN THE WORLD: FINDING THE MEANING OF HOME (2022). While A GREAT MARRIAGE explores "the unguessable country of marriage," (Angela Carter), A PLACE IN THE WORLD explores the equally unguessable meaning of home.

The novel WOMEN IN SUNLIGHT (2018) delves into possibilities and perceived impossibilities women face as they grow older. Three southern women become friends and decide to leap out of what is forecast for them and take on life in Italy. They've all had their share of loss but this is their year. Frances wrote the novel as a tribute to all the women she has met who have traveled to a foreign country in quest of enlightenment. The novel is in preproduction as a film by Water's End.

As is obvious from the above, Frances has a passionate interest in travel and houses. When she saw Bramasole, a neglected, 250-year-old Tuscan villa nestled in terraced olive groves, it was fate. Out of that instant infatuation came several international bestsellers: UNDER THE TUSCAN SUN, which remained on the New York Times bestseller list for 2 1/2 years. In succession came other memoirs: BELLA TUSCANY, EVERY DAY IN TUSCANY, and then three collaborations with her husband, poet Edward Mayes: IN TUSCANY, BRINGING TUSCANY HOME, and THE TUSCAN SUN COOKBOOK, "one of the best Italian cookbooks of all time." (Forbes) All are about taking chances, living in Italy, loving and renovating an old Italian villa, and the "voluptuousness of Italian life." The film UNDER THE TUSCAN SUN, starring Diane Lane as Frances, was released in 2003 and still enjoys world-wide popularity.

Frances finds that writing about travel doubles the pleasures of each. Her SEE YOU IN THE PIAZZA, travels to little-known places in Italy, and the travel memoir A YEAR IN THE WORLD: JOURNEYS OF A PASSIONATE TRAVELER examine the possibilities of feeling at home in a foreign country. Working with photographer Steven Rothfeld, she published SHRINES: IMAGES OF ITALIAN WORSHIP.

Coming from deep southern roots, Frances based her first novel, SWAN, a family saga, in her hometown, Fitzgerald, Georgia. UNDER MAGNOLIA, a memoir of her first twenty years, unwittingly caused the revelation of family secrets, one of which inspired THE GREAT MARRIAGE.

These books have been translated into over fifty foreign editions. Honorary citizen of Cortona and Arezzo, Frances has been awarded the Marco d'Oro prize, and the Premio Casato Prime Donne for a major contribution in the field of letters. She is a NEA Fellowship and a member of the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame.

Formerly a professor of creative writing at San Francisco State University, she directed The Poetry Center and chaired the Department of Creative Writing. Frances's first love is poetry. Prior to turning to prose, she was a widely published poet. Her books include: SUNDAY IN ANOTHER COUNTRY, AFTER SUCH PLEASURES, THE ARTS OF FIRE, HOURS, THE BOOK OF SUMMER and EX VOTO. From her teaching came THE DISCOVERY OF POETRY: A FIELD GUIDE TO READING AND WRITING POEMS.

Frances devotes herself to writing, traveling, and various restoration projects. She and her husband live in North Carolina and Cortona, Italy.

"Tuscany may have found its own bard in Frances Mayes."

-- The New York Times

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Reviews

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5

3,541 global ratings

Lisa Shore

Lisa Shore

5

Great story!

Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2023

Verified Purchase

I loved this book! It’s a simple story with lots of depth and imagery

Tami B.

Tami B.

5

Fabulous

Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2021

Verified Purchase

I’m stingy with my stars—a novel needs to present a great story and well developed characters, flow nicely, and offer food for thought and inspiration before I hand out all five. Loved the use of words in this book. The art, the poetry, the food, the friendship, the adventure, the possibilities, the hope. I personally follow the motto “the best is yet to come”; age shouldn’t be a limitation. Mayes obviously thinks the same. Three women turning 60 meet at an open house for a senior-living community, and decide to move to Tuscany for a year together. An adventure that pays off richly in new experiences, friendships, and opportunities for personal growth. Absolutely loved this book.

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6 people found this helpful

Amazon Customer

Amazon Customer

5

Amazing read

Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2024

Verified Purchase

Have re read this book several times and each time get more and more into it. Great storyline , love the main characters, they all have their own personality but blend together amazingly. Well written and with accurate description of the Italian landscape and cities. Well done Frances another good read from you.

Natalie B.

Natalie B.

5

Would You Do This?

Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2020

Verified Purchase

This book was. very contagious! I just.could not put it down! Frances Mays is one of my favorite authors, and I love the recipes she includes in many of her books ... it is about several, retired, Southern ladies. They each had an interesting life/background, but the fact that they up and took off for Italy, was amazing! I do not think I could or would ever be able do that! The people they met and the friends they made ... How wonderful! I loved living thru their eyes! Their experiences with the language, the people, the foods, and the culture gave them a most wonderful life in their retirement home in Italy.

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2 people found this helpful

L. Diane Haisman

L. Diane Haisman

5

A fun read for a lot of women who'd love a getaway to a villa in Italy!!!

Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2023

Verified Purchase

Absolutely "amazing" service from "Magers and Quinn" - the independent bookseller from whom I bought this book. It arrived 'far' quicker than I expected, and in even better condition than I expected. So I will look to buy from them again! Now - the story - three 'senior' women. at an open house to check out living in a retirement community - meet, get along, become friends, and decide to heck with that lifestyle - let's pool our resources and rent a place in Italy -- and just see where it goes from there! And where it goes - is to some wonderful adventures, brave choices, getting to know yourself, come to terms with life, and enough to make you wonder if 'you' would be that courageous!

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