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One Great Lie

af Deb Caletti

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656408,256 (3.86)Ingen
When Charlotte wins a scholarship to a writing workshop in Venice with the charismatic and brilliant Luca Bruni, it's a dream come true. Writing is her passion, she loves Bruni's books, and going to that romantic and magical sinking city gives her the chance to solve a long-time family mystery about a Venetian poet deep in their lineage, Isabella Di Angelo, who just might be the real author of a very famous poem. Bruni's villa on the eerie island of La Calamita is extravagant--lush beyond belief, and the other students are both inspiring and intimidating. Venice itself is beautiful, charming, and seductive, but so is Luca Bruni. As his behavior becomes increasingly unnerving, and as Charlotte begins to unearth the long-lost work of Isabella with the help of sweet, smart Italian Dante, other things begin to rise, too--secrets about the past, and secrets about the present. As the events of the summer build to a shattering climax, Charlotte will be forced to confront some dark truths about the history of powerful men--and about the determination of creative girls.… (mere)
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Viser 1-5 af 6 (næste | vis alle)
Powerful, as one would expect for the followup to A HEART IN A BODY. This explores power dynamics in a really profound way, and explored questions of separating the art from the artist that I think are only growing more and more relevant. ( )
  whakaora | Mar 5, 2023 |
Deb Caletti does it again. In One Great Lie, Charlotte’s story comes with all the purposeful heartbreak one expects from Ms. Caletti. She excels at captures those sticky situations in which young women find themselves because they don’t have the life experiences to avoid them. In fact, this is one story I would make required reading for teens if only to show them just how easy it is for someone in a position of power to take advantage of someone else and silence their voice after the fact. At the same time, Ms. Caletti stresses the importance of the #metoo movement and its importance in reducing rape culture and the ongoing silence of victims. While watching all of this unfold through Charlotte’s eyes is as painful as you can imagine, One Great Lie is a must-read for anyone looking to be an ally for abuse victims. ( )
  jmchshannon | Jul 12, 2021 |
When a new Deb Caletti book comes along, I read it. Her writing relates to what young women are experiencing. It not all roses for Caletti heroines, there’s plenty of anguish, and confusion as they head into adulthood. In One Great Lie Charlotte, senior in high school, has won a scholarship to a writing workshop held on a private island close to Venice, Italy. Two things compelled her to apply. The first is her mother’s Italian heritage and a mystery about a Venetian poet, Isabella de Angelo, who lived in Venice in the 1500’s. The second reason Charlotte is so excited is the instructor is her favorite author. Things don’t turn out as Charlotte expect, but she does find “herself” but the skillful foreshadowing of the instructor’s predatory actions show that Charlotte is in for more than she planned. An afterword by the author tells of the research that went into writing this book. ( )
  brangwinn | Jun 8, 2021 |
Venice—family mysteries!

Caletti’s YA novel with 17 year old student Charlotte cutting a literary swathe through Venice (that is if you count her research hours as a swathe!) Having been awarded the chance too attend a summer writer’s program in Venice led by her favourite Italian author Luca Bruni heads off taking with her a book of poetry, The Verses, supposedly written by a fifteenth century ancestor, Isabella di Angelo, a “great-great-(too many greats too count)-grandmother on her mother’s side.”
Things don’t quite go according to plan and Charlotte ends up trying to track down Isabella and her writings.
Of course their two lives collide in the written sense, the hunt for Isabella, who she was is fascinating—a mystery to be solved if possible.
Likewise Charlotte’s journey has moments—of darkness and light, surrounding her search. This is equally as fascinating.

A Simon and Schuster Children's Publishing ARC via NetGalley
Please note: Quotes taken from an advanced reading copy maybe subject to change ( )
  eyes.2c | Jun 4, 2021 |
In this time of the Me-Too movement, one of the plots of this YA novel was fairly predictable. Charlotte is an aspiring writer who is thrilled to be chosen to spend a summer in Venice under the tutelage of Bruni, her author idol. This will give her the opportunity to research her ancestor, a woman Charlotte is convinced was actually a wonderful but unrecognized poet who was overshadowed by her famous lover. There is plenty of foreshadowing that Bruni is not what he sees, and other female students show signs of being troubled by him, so Charlotte's eventual betrayal by him is not a surprise, but it is nonetheless moving. What is particularly poignant, though, is her tenacious research into early Venetian poets and the relationship that develops with a young archivist and his bookseller mom. This is both a cautionary tale and a satisfying mystery/romance. ( )
  sleahey | May 5, 2021 |
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When Charlotte wins a scholarship to a writing workshop in Venice with the charismatic and brilliant Luca Bruni, it's a dream come true. Writing is her passion, she loves Bruni's books, and going to that romantic and magical sinking city gives her the chance to solve a long-time family mystery about a Venetian poet deep in their lineage, Isabella Di Angelo, who just might be the real author of a very famous poem. Bruni's villa on the eerie island of La Calamita is extravagant--lush beyond belief, and the other students are both inspiring and intimidating. Venice itself is beautiful, charming, and seductive, but so is Luca Bruni. As his behavior becomes increasingly unnerving, and as Charlotte begins to unearth the long-lost work of Isabella with the help of sweet, smart Italian Dante, other things begin to rise, too--secrets about the past, and secrets about the present. As the events of the summer build to a shattering climax, Charlotte will be forced to confront some dark truths about the history of powerful men--and about the determination of creative girls.

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