Overview
"On a lovely evening in April, Lucca Montale is rushed to the hospital after the car she was driving colllided head-on with a truck. Robert, her doctor, has to break the news that she may never see again." Lucca is an actress with a string of love affairs behind her, now unhappily married with a son. Since his divorce, Robert has lived in a state of emotional paralysis and resignation, relieved only by the weekend visits of his young daughter. During their daily conversations he and Lucca share their life stories, and slowly they are drawn to one another, on terms new to both.Synopsis
While recovering from a devastating car accident, Lucca, a young actress with a string of love affairs behind her, is told by her doctor that she may never see again. Robert, her doctor, is recovering in his own way from his wife's infidelity and a failed marriage, finding happiness only in the weekend visits of his young daughter. As he and Lucca begin to share their life stories through daily conversations, the two slowly reveal to each other their own stories of heartbreak; Lucca admits her deliberate role in the collision that nearly killed her, and Robert begins to let go of his past betrayals. A love story of immense emotional reach and affection, Lucca probes deep truths of lust, loneliness, and the healing power of belonging.
Publishers Weekly
As melancholy, autumnal and finely calibrated as a Bergman film, this second novel by Grondahl (Silence in October) meticulously chronicles the separate past loves of a doctor and his patient, and their shared present detachment. Lucca Montale, an actress with a young son and a string of unhappy affairs behind her, rushes out of her house in the Danish countryside and drives head-on into a truck after her playwright husband, Andreas, tells her that he wants a divorce. At the hospital, she is eventually informed that she may never see again. Attempting to adjust to her new reality, Lucca becomes attached to Robert, her doctor, a divorced father living in a state of denial and resignation. The two manage to overcome not only the abysmal reality of Lucca's injury, but also their own bitter past experiences. Robert invites Lucca to stay with him while she recovers, and their chaste intimacy bears quiet fruit. Through a slow, deliberate accumulation of emotional, psychological and physical detail, Grondahl paints an achingly luminous and nuanced portrait of two characters alienated from those around them and from their own pasts. Lucca's experiences-glamorous trysts with a famous director, an actor and all sorts of men around Europe-are very different from Robert's lonely domesticity and long hours spent listening to classical music, but their stories are treated with equally sensuous attention, the more poignant because it is filtered through an awareness that "life lasted longer than your dreams." Beautifully translated by Born, this is a lovely minor-key effort. (July) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.