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Loading... Hill Townsby Anne Rivers Siddons
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I really didn't care for this novel. It was just waaaaay too commercial and "70's" for my taste. You know how back in the seventies it was the rage to read of the "rich and famous". That is how this book struck me. But I'm telling you; give me anything by this woman and I will read it and usually rave about it. ( )Enjoyable read, and the only time I've ever seen Agoraphobia represented in a work of fiction. no reviews | add a review
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Catherine "Cat" Gaillard narrates her own story, beginning with a gothic childhood of the sort that inspires folk ballads and tasteless jokes. Orphaned at age 5 when her parents are killed in a freakish accident, Cat chooses to live on Morgan's Mountain as the ward of chilly, crazy grandparents, though saner family members are willing to take her in. She reasons that, "From there I would always know what was coming. From there I would see it long before it saw me."
The rest of the story follows Cat and her husband, Joe, on their journey of midlife discovery. They both flirt with the possibility of an affair, they bicker, challenge assumptions, make new friends, drink too much, eat fabulous food, and tour Rome, Florence, and Venice. It's like being there. Siddons lets you inhabit Cat's mind and experience her struggle to overcome agoraphobia, her uncertainties about Joe, and, most of all, her neophyte-traveler's view of Italy. Hill Towns is an exploration of a mature relationship, but it's also an effective travelogue. Read it and see if you don't start to crave caffé granita on the piazza. --Brenda Pittsley
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)
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