This short book from 1960(some describe is a novella) is written from the point of view of Margaret Johnson, a well-preserved middle-aged American lady who is making a leisurely visit of Italy, together with her beautiful daughter Clara. When the handsome Fabrizio starts courting Clara, Margaret feels terribly conflicted : should she tell him and his rather inquisitive family that Clara's apparent innocence is really due to a cognitive arrest incurred as a result of a fall of a horse when she was 10 years old? Should she stop this budding romance in its track? But Margaret feels strangely paralyzed, partially because she has fallen under the spell of Italy, and partially because she wants her daughter's happiness - and Clara wants Fabrizio. Her husband, back in North Carolina, isn't much help, since he pretty much washed his hands of his daughter since her deficiencies became apparent. But Margaret, usually such a pliable wife, cannot obey her husband's wish to Clara's marriage to what he believes is a fortune hunting, untrustworthy Italian who - horror- is a Catholic to boot. After much waffling, Margaret decides to let the wedding take place. But during a preliminary visit to the wedding registry, Fabrizio's father takes a look at Clara's passport and abruptly stops the proceedings. He later explains that he cannot countenance a marriage between 26-year old Clara and his 20-year old son. Between Margaret mentioning that Clara will have a substantial dowry and Fabrizio reminding his father that he is actually 23 years old, the wedding does take place. The book ends with Margaret feeling herself shrink into invisibility, feeling that her role is at an end, and murmuring to herself that she did the right thing.
I think that this book is a small gem. The writing is wonderful, impressionistic. As other reviewers have noted, there are some stereotypes in how Italians and Americans are perceived (the former crafty, the latter energetic). But ultimately the main theme of the story is that of a mother who wants her daughter to experience all the possible joys of life, including that of love. Margaret is a mother first and foremost, and she has defied her lord and master on a number of occasions when it comes to Clara. One of the book's last musings is that Margaret hopes that the fact that Clara is no longer her responsibility will bring her (Margaret) and her husband closer together.
One of the attractions of the book to me was the veil of ambiguity that covered everything. Did Fabrizio's father really forget his son's age, or was the scene in the wedding office a ruse to extract a larger financial settlement? Was Clara's father really unable to travel to Italy because of pressing business concerns (the crooner who was to be the face of his cigarette company had been called before the Committee on Un-American Activities!) or was he just not that interested in the daughter he considered "damaged goods"?
This book can easily be read in a single setting, but it is a great little dose of good writing about a theme that is still as relevant today as in 1960.