Charming tale of an Italian book publicist and poet who “launched a [successful] crowdfunding campaign on Facebook to open a bookshop in a tiny village in the mountains.”
In 2019, Donati decided to quit the city rat race and return to Lucignana, inhabited by 180 people, including the author's 101-year-old mother, with whom she had a complicated relationship. With the help of friends, relatives, and strangers, she raised enough money to open Libreria Sopra la Penna. Despite the Covid-19 pandemic, which hit Italy hard a couple months later, and a fire that destroyed much of the building and its stock, the business continues to operate. Donati constructs her story as a series of journal entries from January to June 2021, when pandemic regulations in Italy were still in constant flux and the bookstore was holding its own with the help of local volunteers and a steady mail-order business. Each of the dozens of entries ends with a catalog of books ordered on that day, lists on which British and American titles hold their own with Italian ones, and Emily Dickinson calendars and novels by Fannie Flagg reveal a surprising popularity. While each of the entries is loosely anchored by the homely events of that day—whether that means planting some clover in the garden or welcoming a few guests on days when travel is permitted—Donati doesn’t confine herself to the present. She meditates on the books she likes (and dislikes) and experiences growing up, and she traces the connections among five generations of her family. As the narrative proceeds, readers get a clear sense of the mercurial, devotedly feminist Donati and her tastes in literature as well as a slightly foggier but alluring sense of a daily life that seems to be dominated by making choices of flowers for the garden and packing up a few books and literary-themed jars of jam.
Readers beware: will cause the irresistible desire to open a small bookstore.