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Title:Twice Born
Author:Margaret Mazzantini
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 464 pages
Published:May 12th 2011 by Viking Adult (first published November 25th 2008)
Categories:Fiction. Historical. Historical Fiction
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Twice Born Hardcover | Pages: 464 pages
Rating: 4.31 | 5288 Users | 498 Reviews

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This international bestseller is a sweeping portrait of motherhood, loss, and redemption in war-torn Sarajevo. Filled with memories of the four-year siege of Sarajevo, Gemma reluctantly boards a flight from her native Rome to that war-scarred city with her sixteen-year-old son, Pietro. She hopes to teach her son about the city of his birth and about Diego, the father he never knew. Once there Gemma is caught between the present and the past, reliving her love affair with Diego, their determination to start a family, and their deep connection to Sarajevo even as the threat of war loomed. In this haunting and sophisticated novel, Mazzantini masterfully probes the startling emotional territory of what makes a family-particularly what makes a mother. As the fate of Sarajevo converges with Gemma's all-consuming desire to have a child we see how far she is driven, in a stunning revelation that is both heartbreaking and cathartic. Brought to life by an unforgettable cast of characters, Twice Born is a tale of the acts of brutality and generosity that war can inspire. A blockbuster bestseller in Mazzantini's native Italy, it has taken Europe by storm and will soon be published around the world.


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Original Title: Venuto al mondo
ISBN: 0670022683 (ISBN13: 9780670022687)
Edition Language: English
Literary Awards: Premio Campiello (2009), Premio Alassio Centolibri - Un autore per l'Europa (2009)


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Ratings: 4.31 From 5288 Users | 498 Reviews

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Ouf. I bought this book about three years ago, after finishing Elena Ferrante's My Beautiful Friend and the three remaining books in the series. I must have stumbled upon a list of "If you like Ferrante..." This book shares a few things with Ferrante (Italy, themes of identity and motherhood), but it's more complex and I find myself preferring Mazzantini to Ferrante (never thought she could be outdone, but...) It's one of those books with many lives - you think will be about one thing, then you

I expected to enjoy this book as much as I enjoyed "Don't Move" by the same author, but my anticipation has been deceived. Mrs. Mazzantini elaborates too much on little unnecessary details that in my opinion distract the reader's attention from the incomplete characters she has created. The narrator is too pathetic, I could barely stand her. The writing style is too chaotic, the story line too predictable. This is one of those rare occasions where I liked the movie better than the book just

I just told the plot of this novel out loud to my husband. And he listened. It leaves me with my heart pounding and a little bit broken. It takes turns I didn't always see coming. And it shows more clearly pictures of the Balkan war than the ones I saw with my own eyes on television and in the newspapers. (Isn't it often that way?)I'm wavering between 4 and 5 stars for it because some sections were a bit long-winded but in hindsight, what could be edited?You can talk about war. Or it can happen

now this is such a disgrace of the taste, the logic, the literature and the history.

What an amazing writer! Probably one of the best books I have ever read.

DNF. I read 58 pages and not interested to continue.

An Italian woman returns to Sarajevo with her teenage son to revisit the places and people she and his father knew during the fighting there.This was an incredibly intense read - I both wanted to read it and didn't want to read it at the same time as I was afraid I wouldn't be able to cope with learning what had gone on. I found myself reading in short bursts and having to steel myself to pick it up again each time I put it down. But it was so compelling that I absolutely had to get to the end,

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