The eruption of Italy’s Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79 buried a city and its people, their treasures and secrets. Centuries later, echoes of this disaster resonate with profound consequences in the life of classics professor Sophie Chase.
In the aftermath of a tragic shooting on the University of Texas campus, Sophie seeks sanctuary on the isle of Capri, immersing herself in her latest scholarly project alongside her colleagues, her star pupil, and their benefactor, the compelling yet enigmatic business mogul John Lyros.
Beneath layers of volcanic ash lies the Villa della Notte–the Night Villa–home to first-century nobles, as well as to the captivating slave girl at the heart of an ancient controversy. And secreted in a subterranean labyrinth rests a cache of antique documents believed lost to the ages: a prize too tantalizing for Sophie to resist. But suspicion, fear, and danger roam the long-untrodden tunnels and chambers beneath the once sumptuous estate–especially after Sophie sees the face of her former lover in the darkness, leaving her to wonder if she is chasing shadows or succumbing to the siren song of the Night Villa. Whatever shocking events transpired in the face of Vesuvius’s fury have led to deeper, darker machinations that inexorably draw Sophie into their vortex, rich in stunning revelations and laden with unseen menace.
Praise for The Night Villa
“Visit The Night Villa: Carol Goodman’ s luminous prose and superb storytelling will keep you entertained into the late hours.”—Nancy Pickard
“The pleasure of a Carol Goodman novel is in her enviable command of the classical canon–and the deft way she [writes] a book that’s light enough for a weekend on the beach but literary enough for a weekend in the Hamptons.”—Chicago Tribune
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Creators
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Release date
August 5, 2008 -
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780345509383
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- ISBN: 9780345509383
- File size: 3554 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
July 7, 2008
In this complex and lyrical literary thriller from Goodman (The Sonnet Lover
), University of Texas classics professor Sophie Chase, after barely surviving a gunman with ties to a sinister cult, joins an expedition to Capri. A donor has funded both the exact reconstruction of a Roman villa destroyed when Mount Vesuvius buried nearby Herculaneum in A.D. 79, and a computer system that can decipher the charred scrolls being excavated from the villa's ruins. Sophie's hopes for a recuperative idyll fade after her old boyfriend, who disappeared years before into the same cult as the campus gunman, appears in the area, implicating the cult in a criminal conspiracy. Meanwhile, extracts from the scrolls—the journals of a Roman visiting the villa just before the volcano erupted—shade toward bloodshed and betrayal. The scrolls' oddly modern tone aside, Goodman deftly mixes cultural and religious history, geography, myth, personal memory, dream and even portent without sacrificing narrative drive, against the beautiful backdrop of the locale with its echoes of unimaginable loss. 5-city author tour. -
Library Journal
Starred review from August 15, 2008
Goodman ("The Sonnet Lover") returns with her darkest, most complex novel to date. Classics professor Sophie Chase is trying to deal with the breakdown of both her marriage and her husband, who joined a cultlike group and disappeared. Her attempts to battle her inner demons while trying to be supportive of an intellectually promising but emotionally needy student fail when the student's estranged boyfriend arrives on campus with a gun. In the aftermath of the shooting spree, Chase takes advantage of a research opportunity in Italy, even though the lead professor is an old flame. Goodman always seamlessly blends present-day suspense with a mystery from the past, which here involves ancient papyrus scrolls, buried in the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 C.E., that someone does not want restored. Goodman mixes literary prose with a page-turning plot, making her work appealing to a broad range of readers. Highly recommended for all fiction collections.Beth Lindsay, Washington State Univ. Libs., PullmanCopyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
August 1, 2008
Goodman has made a name for herself writingelegant literary thrillers. Her newest follows the template of The Sonnet Lover (2007), asSophie Chase, a classics professor at the University of Texas, researches thefate ofPetronia Iusta, a slave girl living in Capri in AD79, the year Vesuvius erupted. After the boyfriend of one her students goes on a shooting rampage, leaving two dead and Sophie wounded, the handsome but rakish professor Elgin Lawrence convinces Sophie to travel to Capri totranslate the scrolls of a Roman writer named Phineas Aulus. After all, evidencesuggests that Petroniawas at the Villa della Notte at the same time as Phineas. Upon arriving, she is soondrawn into a dangerous conspiracy when she encounters an ex-lover and learns that the Tetraktyans, a cult thatworships Pythagoras, are equally interested in the scrollsand will stop at nothing to get them. Graceful, fluid prose; an intricately plotteddual mystery setin the past and present;a strong heroine; and handsome and mysterious menall combine to make for a thoroughly scintillating read.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
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- English
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