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Windfallen by Jojo Moyes
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Windfallen (edition 2004)

by Jojo Moyes

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4071461,929 (3.16)None
Fiction. Literature. Romance. The tiny, well-ordered seaside village of Merham holds little to interest the adventurous-except for Arcadia, the breathtaking art deco house perched above the shoreline. Attracted to this magical place, young Lottie Swift surrenders freely to its temptations and ultimately must face the hard consequences of her actions. Years later, another young woman comes to Merham. A designer hired to make over the now-empty Arcadia, Daisy Parsons seeks a new beginning, as Lottie once did. Fleeing a broken relationship, Daisy finds refuge at Arcadia, and something more-a love she thought she would never know again.… (more)
Member:CatieN
Title:Windfallen
Authors:Jojo Moyes
Info:Harper Torch (2004), Paperback
Collections:To read
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Foreign Fruit by Jojo Moyes

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Recensione: http://thereadingpal.blogspot.it/2017/05/recensione-99-la-casa-delle-onde.html

"Mi dispiace" borbottò, con un sorriso contrito. " Non sai
quanto, Daisy. Ma non posso baciare e respirare contemporaneamente."



Allora, i romance (a parte alcuni lgbt ) non sono esattamente il mio genere. Devono avere qualcosa "in più". Questo romanzo mi è piaciuto abbastanza, ma non tanto da farmi venire voglia di leggere qualcos'altro scritto da Jojo Moyes. Quindi probabilmente questo rimarrà il primo e ultimo libro che vedrete qui sul blog scritto da questa autrice.
Parliamo quindi della storia, che si divide in tre parti. Nella prima seguiamo Lottie, una giovane ragazza che si è trovata ad essere ospitata da un'altra famiglia, benestante, i cui membri si dividono tra quelli a lei affezionati e quelli che preferirebbero non averla tra i piedi. Attratta dagli abitanti di Villa Arcadia, fa amicizia con loro fino al disastro.
Nella seconda seguiamo Daisy, ormai anni dopo le vicende accadute a Lottie, che arriva a Mehram per ristrutturare Villa Arcadia e farci un Hotel. Le sue vicende personali le impediscono di andare avanti e fare quello che desidera.
Nella terza parte si troverà un finale per entrmabe.
Per quanto mi riguarda, ho trovato molto più piacevole seguire Lottie invece che Daisy. Perché? Be', Lottie è una persona piuttosto forte, che ha fatto le cose che doveva fare e ha cercato di lasciarsi il passato alle spalle. E' diventata più forte con il passare del tempo e non si è fatta abbattere.
Daisy, al contrario, fin da subito è piagnucolosa e debole e migliora davvero poco con l'avanzare delle pagine. Seriamente. Ogni due per tre sta a piangersi addosso. perché le cose non vanno come vuole lei e Daniel non la calcola, si deve prendere cura della bimba da sola e non ce la fa, non è più bella come prima, i muratori non la rispettano, Jones non le presta attenzione... E ma cavoli, un po' di spina dorsale! Un personaggio davvero irritante.
Tra quelli che non sono i protagonisti, il personaggio che più mi ha interessata è stata Adeline. e' particolare, non si lascia abbattere anche se la sua vita non è rose e fiori, anzi sta accanto a Lottie anche nel momento del bisogno.
Anche Jones non è male, sicuramente meglio di Daniel. Se il primo lavora,si da da fare, cerca di passare oltre i disastri della sua vita, il secondo è un poveraccio, depresso e narcisista, un bambino nel corpo di un adulto che non riesce a prendersi le sue responsabilità e addirittura scappa da esse e lascia Daisy da sola con la loro bambina. Anche lui è un personaggio che mi ha fatto storcere il naso e per tutto il tempo ho pensato "muori, ti prego. Vai via."
Anche i luoghi sono molto diversi. Villa Arcadia è completamente estranea alla moribonda Mehram: è come se quella casa moderna, vitale, stesse combattendo una lunghissima battaglia contro la cittadina anziana e bigotta che non la lascia respirare. Ne ha viste, di cose, quella casa, e pian piano le riporta alla luce, inesorabilmente.
Lo stile di scrittura non mi ha entusiasmato, ma neanche annoiato come succede con certi libri. Sono rimasta indifferente.
Insomma, è stata una lettura carina, che si è salvata grazie a Lottie, ma nulla di che. Mi aspettavo molto di più visto che quasi tutti parlano molto bene di Jojo Moyes. ( )
  thereadingpal | Jun 14, 2022 |
I stopped reading it after 1/3 of the book, as it seemed to me a waste of time. There are so many books to read. I imagine many others liked it as the writing was fine, but it just read like it was written for teens. ( )
  Wren73 | Mar 4, 2022 |
This is a story of things half said, almost said and never said. Set in a small seaside town its inhabitants will forever fight change to their own detriment. The reader is introduced to outsiders who will change everything forever.
( )
  kimkimkim | Aug 21, 2017 |
One of my favorite authors ( )
  INorris | Jun 8, 2017 |
Lottie, originally an evacuee, spends her teenage years with the Holden family. Celia is close to Lottie in age, and they are good friends. Against the wishes of Celia's parents, they become friendly with some 'bohemians', rather scandalous people for the time, who live in a large house called Arcadia. Lottie learns to question some of her beliefs and values, but eventually their involvement is too much and Celia is sent away. She returns with London gloss, engaged to a young man called Guy. And Lottie falls for him in a big way.

There's a huge cast of characters in the book; people in the village, visitors to Arcadia, even Celia's family. Her younger siblings seem almost irrelevant to the plot, and I never did get a handle on most of the others. In one sense it didn't matter, but equally it made it very hard to concentrate as I kept wanting to flick back to find out who was whom.

I was just getting interested in the story when it switched abruptly to a different set of characters, fifty years later. Daisy, a single mother with a young baby, agrees to take charge of renovating an old house - which turns out to be Arcadia. I realised that there were going to be some connections with the people in the first half of the book, but was so dazed by the different names that I didn't spot the obvious one until it was revealed quite a way through, and by that stage I'd almost forgotten what the first part of the story was about.

It probably didn't help that I've read it over three weeks, just a chapter or two at bedtime; I finally finished the last hundred pages or so yesterday, and it did make more sense. The intertwining of past and present worked well, and the ending was encouraging. However there was then a brief epilogue which left me confused once more; perhaps it was too subtle.

Three and a half stars would be fairer than three; the writing is good, and the characterisation of the main characters works well. Had I read it over a few days I might have given it four. ( )
  SueinCyprus | Jan 26, 2016 |
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Original title "Foreign Fruit" reedited in US as "Windfallen".
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Fiction. Literature. Romance. The tiny, well-ordered seaside village of Merham holds little to interest the adventurous-except for Arcadia, the breathtaking art deco house perched above the shoreline. Attracted to this magical place, young Lottie Swift surrenders freely to its temptations and ultimately must face the hard consequences of her actions. Years later, another young woman comes to Merham. A designer hired to make over the now-empty Arcadia, Daisy Parsons seeks a new beginning, as Lottie once did. Fleeing a broken relationship, Daisy finds refuge at Arcadia, and something more-a love she thought she would never know again.

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Merham is a well-ordered 1950s seaside town: the kind of town in which everyone knows their place (and those who don't are promptly put in it). Lottie Swift, an evacuee who has grown up with the respectable Holden family, loves Merham, while the Holdens' daughter Celia chafes against the constraints of the town.

When a group of bohemians takes over Arcadia, a stark Art Deco house on the seafront, the girls are as drawn to its temptations as Merham's citizens are appalled by them. They set in place a chain of events both within the Holden family and Merham itself which will have longstanding and tragic consequences for all concerned.

Now, almost fifty years on, Arcadia is returning to life, and its inhabitants stirring up strong feelings again. And prompting more than one person to look into their own romantic history and ask: Can you ever leave your past behind?
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