cover image Marcus of Umbria: What an Italian Dog Taught an American Girl About Love

Marcus of Umbria: What an Italian Dog Taught an American Girl About Love

Justine Van der Leun. Rodale, $23.99 (218pp) ISBN 978-1-60529-960-0

A sweet, disarming story finds a young New York editor venturing to Italy to pursue romance with a sexy gardener and ending up falling for a neglected dog instead. In her straightforward, unembellished prose, Van der Leun recounts how she shucked her job editing the Letters page for an unidentified “lifestyle” magazine because she wasn’t good at getting along with the other grasping workers, broke up with “a perfect modern man” who was also Mr. Boring, and spent a summer month at an acquaintance’s house in Collelungo, a sheep-farming village of 200 souls in Umbria. There she met one of the town’s sons, the handsome, earnest gardener Emanuele, whose entire hard-working, ample-eating, non-English-speaking family she grew to know and love over the year she returned to live in the town. But she was appalled by the younger brother’s treatment of his animals, specifically the dogs he used for hunting, and nursed to health a sadly starving young English pointer she named Marcus. Over the year, the relationship with Emanuele did not blossom; but Van der Leun became crazy about her sleek, dark-headed fast-running bird dog—a female, it turned out, who needed quickly to be spayed. The author manages to capture the lovely, vanishing Old World ways of these tightly knit people, while also interweaving a heart-melting tale. (June)