Blog Tour/Book Review: That Summer in Puglia by Valeria Vescina

That Summer in Puglia Blog Tour

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for That Summer in Puglia by Valeria Vescina and sharing my review of this intense and powerful love story.

Thank you to Aimee at Bookollective for inviting me to join the tour.


That Summer in PugliaAbout the Book

Tommaso has escaped discovery for thirty years but a young private investigator, Will, has tracked him down.

Tommaso asks him to pretend never to have found him. To persuade Will, Tommaso recounts the story of his life and his great love. In the process, he comes to recognise his true role in the events which unfolded, and the legacy of unresolved grief.

Now he’s being presented with a second chance – but is he ready to pay the price it exacts?

Format: Paperback (303 pp.)    Publisher: Eyewear Publishing
Published: 1st March 2018        Genre: Fiction, Romance

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find That Summer in Puglia on Goodreads


My Review

That Summer in Puglia tells the story of a love affair between two young people – Tommaso and Anna – that is as intense as the heat of an Italian summer.  Tommaso is clever, introspective and solitary with just a small circle of friends.  He’s never had a girlfriend because he’s never come across anyone with whom he feels a real connection.  That all changes when he meets Anna, the result of a chance encounter – or perhaps it’s fate? ‘Extraordinary, how the course of lives can depend on trivia.’

I loved the way Tommaso and Anna bond over a shared love of books and thoughtful, earnest conversation.  One of the great strengths of the book is the way it conveys the plethora of feelings associated with first love – and not just desire or wanting to be with the other person all the time.  Tommaso finds his outlook on the world has suddenly changed since meeting Anna.  ‘Places, people and objects outside school took on new meaning whenever – and it was often – they confirmed something she had said and which had never occurred to me… Everyday actions triggered musings as to what Anna might say or do: whether she took the same pleasure as me in the blossoming almond trees at this time of year…whether she ate her focaccia alla cipolla – oozing from every side with its succulent filling of sautéed onions, capers, tiny black olives and fresh tomato chunks – with fork and knife like my mother, or with bare hands like most of us.’   

As Tommaso and Anna roam the maze of narrow streets that make up the Old Town of Ostuni, taking delight in small things and shared places, there are beautiful descriptions of the ancient town, full of light and shade. ‘We turned into the narrower stretch of the street.  Over the centuries, carts had carved smooth grooves into the white flagstones.  The further we climbed, the more closely huddled together the houses became.  Arched alleyways opened up alongside us and snaked their way towards partially-seen buildings and hidden corners… The orange-tinted street lights bounced off the whiteness of walls and flagstones, adding to the labyrinth’s air of mystery and magic.’  I also have to include at this point another example of the simply luscious description of Italian food that had my stomach rumbling, in this case tajedda, an ‘amalgam of fresh mussels, potatoes, perini tomatoes, rice and olive oil, all baked together to perfection.’

Tommaso’s relationship with his father is also wonderfully rendered – heartfelt and touching.  In contrast, Tommaso’s relationship with his mother is a picture of complexity.  Both seem unable to express their true feelings and this inability will prove to have unimagined consequences as the story unfolds.

That Summer in Puglia provides a devastating portrait of how love can, in a moment, turn to hate if fuelled by insecurity, jealousy and an inability to trust.  And how what often follows just as quickly is regret, guilt, despair and hopelessness.   It also shows how a single action, even if done for what is thought are the right reasons, can have unintended and long-lasting consequences.   But that sometimes there may be the opportunity to make reparation.

I’ll confess I wasn’t completely convinced by the device of the private investigator as the recipient of Tommaso’s memories or that Tommaso could have remained undiscovered and undocumented for so many years.  However, the emotional power of Tommaso’s story and the effortless, flowing writing of Valeria Vescina is what will stay with me about That Summer in Puglia.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Eyewear Publishing, and Aimee at Bookollective in return for an honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Intense, emotional, intimate

Try something similar… Flesh and Bone and Water by Luiza Sauma (click here for my review)


Valeria VescinaAbout the Author

Valeria Vescina is from Puglia, was educated in Switzerland and the UK, and has lived for years in London with her family. After a successful career in management, she gained an MA in Creative & Life Writing at Goldsmiths (University of London). That Summer In Puglia is her debut novel. Her activity as a critic includes reviews for Seen And Heard International, Talking Humanities and the European Literature Network. She has taught creative writing workshops on the narrative potential of various art forms. Valeria also holds a degree in International Studies (University of Birmingham) and a Sloan Msc. in Management (London Business School).

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Blog Tour/Book Review: I Will Find You (Seal Island #2) by Daniela Sacerdoti

I Will Find You Blog Tour Poster

Having read and enjoyed the first book in Daniela Sacerdoti’s Seal Island series, Keep Me Safe, I’m delighted to be hosting the final stop on the blog tour for the next book in the series, I Will Find You.


I Will Find YouAbout the Book

After her beloved mother dies, Cora is heartbroken. When she discovers her mother has left her a cottage – a crumbling shelter on a remote and beautiful Scottish island – Cora hopes that travelling there will help her feel closer to the person she has lost. The moment she arrives on the wild, windswept island of Seal, Cora instantly falls under its spell. She is drawn to Innes, recently returned to the island to confront his past.

As Cora begins to unravel her mother’s connection to Seal, she learns the island has a dark, turbulent history. She is not the first lonely traveller to have sought refuge at Gealach Cottage. And there may be far more to her attraction to Innes than she could have ever imagined…

Format:  ebook (320 pp.)        Publisher: Headline Review
Published: 17th May 2018      Genre: Contemporary/Historical Fiction, Romance

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find I Will Find You on Goodreads


My Review

Following the death of her mother, Cora and her brother, Stephen, find out they didn’t know everything about her.  Far from it.  A box containing a key leads them to discover their mother owned a cottage on the remote Scottish island of Seal.  For Cora, handling the key evokes a strange sense of yearning, a feeling a little like déjà vu.    Already, with her mother’s death, she feels a sense of displacement from her current life – like ‘a stranger in a strange land’.  No longer do the busy streets of London fill her with excitement: ‘I’d begin to feel overwhelmed by the noise and the smells if the city.’ Something has changed for Cora.  ‘My mum’s death had been like that – a tiny event in the big picture of things, no more than a minute shift of the axis, and yet it had brought a monumental change in my life, a change to everything I was, everything I loved, everything I’d built up to then….I existed in a world that had changed all its rules.’

The cottage offers Cora the prospect of a new start, a way to leave behind her grief at her mother’s death, a failed relationship, her current struggle to make progress with the book she has been working on and a feeling that maybe her heart is ‘asleep’.  (Don’t worry, it won’t be long before it is awoken.)  Those familiar with Daniela Sacerdoti’s books won’t be surprised to learn that, along with the romantic storyline, there is an underlying sense of the mystical or supernatural, a strong element of folklore and an atmospheric sense of place.   The location, on a remote Scottish island, at the mercy of the wind and weather, is the perfect place for these different strands to come together.

There is also a strong sense of the past and present intertwining as the present day story of Cora is interspersed with a complementary story from 1745 recounting the experiences of Margaret McCrimmon, caught up in the climax of the Jacobite risings.  The narrative moves seamlessly between the two stories with the two women’s lives following a similar trajectory that involves love and hope for the future, but not before very real dangers have been navigated.

I’ll confess that I sometimes struggle with books that have dual time narratives, often finding the story set in the past more compelling than that set in the present.  I’m pleased to say I Will Find You was an exception.  I think this is because the main characters in the present day storyline, Cora and Innes, felt absolutely believable as characters.  In particular, Innes, for whom the author creates a complex and traumatic back story.  His memories of deeply unsettling events from his childhood help to explain his restless spirit, his history of failed relationships and his feeling that he is in some way ‘tainted’, doomed to spoil everything – and everyone – he touches.

The book is structured with a Prologue and Epilogue framing three sections appropriately titled, because of the pivotal role the sea plays in the book, ‘Low Tide’, ‘Flood Tide’ and ‘High Tide’.  For those who don’t know (and I had to look it up), a flood tide is the incoming or rising tide that occurs between the time when the tide is lowest and the time when the following tide is highest.

For those who have read the first book in the series (although this isn’t essential, as I Will Find You works perfectly well as a standalone), there are walk on parts for a couple of the characters from Keep Me Safe.   Finally, I need to mention the final section of the book, entitled ‘Book of Souls’, which addresses another theme common to the author’s books, that of the past repeating itself – or perhaps, echoing is a more apt word – down the years.

If you’re a reader looking for a compelling, emotional story with an atmospheric setting and who has a few tissues handy for the end, then there’s good news – I Will Find You has found you!

I received an advance review copy courtesy of publishers, Headline, and NetGalley in return for an honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Romantic, atmospheric, haunting

Try something similar…Secrets of the Sea House by Elisabeth Gifford or watch the classic film I Know Where I’m Going (1945).


About the Author

Daniela Sacerdoti is a mother and a writer. Born in Naples, but brought up in a small village in the Italian Alps, she lives near Glasgow with her husband and sons. She steals time to write when everyone has gone to bed, or before they wake up. She’s a Primary teacher, but she chose to be at home with her children. She loves being with her boys, reading anything she can get her hands on and chatting with her girlfriends. But she also adores being on her own, free to daydream and make up stories.

Daniela Sacerdoti
Photo credit: Josephine Tunney

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