Last Days in Plaka
Henriette Lazaridis. Pegasus, $26.95 (304p) ISBN 978-1-639-36561-6
A young artist travels to Greece to learn more about her roots and strikes an unlikely friendship with an elderly woman in the muted latest from Lazaridis (The Clover House). Anna is 27, around the same age her parents were when they left Athens to emigrate to the U.S., and she’s made the reverse journey to find out more about her origins. She gets a job at an art gallery and spends her free time attending Catholic mass and making murals. A priest at the church encourages Anna to visit fellow parishioner Irini, 82, knowing the lonely older woman will benefit from Anna’s company. At first, Irini seems reluctant to be Anna’s friend because of their age difference, but they soon bond over watching Truffaut films and Irini shares her passion for classical music. She also recounts the devastating story of an earthquake that destroyed her house and confides in Anna about her sadness over her estranged daughter and grandson. Though Irini’s family story builds to a lackluster revelation, Lazardis seeds the narrative with moving reflections on art and death (“Wouldn’t a better reward for true believers be one giant embrace of all one’s loved ones like the final grand chord in Mozart, and then death, silence, and the end?”). Patient readers will appreciate this subtle story’s insights. (Apr.)
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Reviewed on: 03/25/2024
Genre: Fiction