cover image Soul of the Border

Soul of the Border

Matteo Righetto, trans. from the Italian by Howard Curtis. Atria, $25 (240p) ISBN 978-1-5011-8812-1

Italian writer Righetto’s first book to be translated into English delivers an intense yet uneven account of 18-year-old Jole’s efforts to take over her father Augusto’s long-standing tobacco-smuggling business after his mysterious disappearance and presumed death. Set in the late 19th century and unfolding in three parts, the narrative chronicles Jole’s arduous three-day journey from Nevada, a small, poverty-stricken village in the Italian countryside, through the Brenta Valley, over the rugged mountains, and across the Austrian border, ending in a mining town filled with workers who are “the very image of damned souls, expelled from hell and exiled on earth.” Though she successfully trades her stash of tobacco for enough copper and silver to provide food and supplies for her family, the return trip home isn’t without drama. In a piled-on sequence of unfortunate events, Jole faces threats from border guards who will capture or shoot her if she is caught with contraband; she is also stalked by a villainous man seeking revenge for Jole’s father’s supposed sexual assault and murder of his own daughter on a previous smuggling journey. A gratuitous scene toward the end further mars the book. Righetto’s in-depth descriptions of the harsh, pastoral scenery are what save the book from being a long-winded recap of a young maiden’s increasingly wretched trials over the river and through the woods, making it most recommendable as a transportive look at a specific time and place. [em](June) [/em]