The Conversion
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http://www.tlavideo.com/gay-the-conversion/p-264405-2
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Russell Todaro, a young American translator, moves to Paris to take stock of his life and goals only to further lose himself in the surprising twists fate has in store for him. One night, two men waving guns and knives break and enter their Paris hotel room, terrorizing Russell and his much older companion, a famous American poet named Edward Cannon. The intruders, not finding what they seemingly expected, leave without further incident but the baffling, traumatic events overwhelm Cannon who dies in his sleep later that night. Now Russell is left to ponder the meaning of the attack, what to do with the poet's unfinished, problematic memoir and, perhaps most importantly, how to reconstruct and move forward with his own life.
Hearing of the disturbing circumstances of Cannon's death, an Italian writer, Marina Vezzoli, invites Russell to recuperate at her villa in Tuscany. But what at first seems like a generous invitation slowly reveals itself to be a calculated offer. As Russell's stay in Italy lengthens, he begins to realize that the people in his life are using or manipulating him, most of all the poet's New York publishers who, against the dying man's wishes, are trying to acquire his unfinished manuscript. Looming over everything is the long and fascinating legacy of Villa Guidi, where during Word War II a Jewish family hid in the subterranean floors, later undergoing a Conversion to Catholicism. In an echo of this dramatic history, Russell is forced to undergo a Conversion of his own in order to find redemption and meaning in his life.
Unrequited romantic love, terrifying terrorist threats, compelling literary intrigue, intoxicating Italian history, queer sex with a handsome bisexual Frenchman and a muscular Italian policeman—all conveyed with crisp, elegant prose. Olshan's eighth novel is a textured pleasure, intricate and intelligent.
Amos Lassen wrote on 03/08/2011:
New from St. Martin’s in Joseph Olshan’s “The Conversion” which is set in Italy and is a novel with twists and turns the entire length. Russell Todaro is a young and gifted translator who has moved to Paris to evaluate his life and goals. Even though he is adept at language, he becomes lost in translating European culture, politics and morality. He soon finds himself amid surprising twists and turns.
The novel begins in Paris with the death of a famous American poet, Edward Cannon, who leaves behind a memoir that has seen ten years of labor. Then we move to a villa, Villa Guidi, in Tuscany where Russell soon realizes that he is being used and manipulated by the people in his life. In New York publishers were trying to obtain the unfinished manuscript. The villa has a fascinating past. During World War II, a Jewish family hid in a floor below and they eventually converted to Catholicism. Like the Jewish family, Russell was forced to undergo a conversion of his own so that he can find both meaning and redemption in his own life.
This is a book that moves the reader as it recounts a story of love and life and loss and both the perils and pleasures of intimacy. The plot gives a beautiful story and the book is finely written. There are transcendent moments of perfect love set against a backdrop of betrayal and death. The beauty of the language and the treasure of a story come together to give us a novel that will be with us for a very long time.
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