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Anne Giardini’s first novel, The Sad Truth About Happiness, garnered international praise for its beautiful story and rich, complex characters. Now, Giardini returns with a warm and witty novel about a young man discovering the difficulties and joys of finding his own way in the world.
Nicolo Pavone is the middle son in an Italian-Canadian family. His younger brother is a law student on the path to a brilliant future. His older brother is married and hides secret ambitions. Nicolo, however, still lives at home, working as a trainer at a gym, saving his money and respecting his parents and his nonna, Filomena. But he knows that this easy living can’t last forever. Life beckons—if only he knew which direction to take.
Everyone, it seems, either has advice for Nicolo or needs advice from him. Dad advises university; Moms says marry and settle down. His brothers, his friends and his clients have their own ideas. But Nonna believes she alone discerns Nicolo’s true heart and nature, and that her advice is all the guidance her grandson requires. By mining the collection of sayings and proverbs she has brought with her from the old country, Nonna believes she can ward off all evil from descending upon her brood. As she dreams, and schemes, she begins to discern what each member of the family needs most, including, finally, herself.
Anne Giardini explores our most significant relationships and decisions—how we choose our families, friends, work and partners—and how we choose to live in the world. A deeply rewarding book about the life-long process of understanding ourselves, Advice for Italian Boys explores the delicate balance of what we are born into and what we eventually become.
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Critical Praise for
Advice For Italian Boys
A beautiful novel, full of satisfying surprises.
The Globe and Mail on The Sad Truth About Happiness
All too rarely a book comes along that is so emotionally honest
and engaging that it is irresistible.. . . Buy two copies of The Sad Truth
About Happiness, one to keep and one to lend, because the lent copy is never
coming back.
The Denver Post on The Sad Truth About Happiness
Giardini appreciates the difference between happy enough and
deeper satisfaction, and parses these nuances with an appealing light touch.
Newsday on The Sad Truth About Happiness
Giardini has hit her stride with her second novel . . . .Advice for Italian Boys is a pleasure to read, with an abundance of lush imagery and a range of fully fleshed characters.
Quill & Quire
"Advice, it seems, is not always easier to give than to receive. Bursting with charming characters, lush description, and gentle wit, this delightful novel will leave readers asking themselves the ultimate question: Whats stopping us?"
Diane Schoemperlen
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The Sad Truth About Happiness
MAGGIE IS 31 YEARS OLD, single and solvent. As the perfect middle child of eccentric parents, Maggie has allowed herself to become a cool observer rather than an engaged participant in her own life. Only when she accepts her roommate Rebeccas invitation to complete a magazine quiz does...
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The Sad Truth About Happiness
In Anne Giardinis bestselling debut novel, The Sad Truth About Happiness , Maggie, the perfect middle daughter of eccentric parents, finds herself on an impulsive quest for happiness, together with her sister Lucys newborn son. Its a journey that will take her across the...
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