- Published: 12 April 2016
- ISBN: 9781619027404
- Imprint: Catapult
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $35.00
The Chapel
A Novel
- Published: 12 April 2016
- ISBN: 9781619027404
- Imprint: Catapult
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $35.00
"Downing's latest work combines art, art history, and Italian allure into a cerebral romance channeling love, loss, and the complexities of emotional closure . . . Line drawings, photographs, blueprints, and some exceptionally witty prose and banter complement this affecting story . . . vividly entertaining." —Publishers Weekly "Downing's rich descriptions of the chapel in Padua and fastidious art lectures are reminiscent of the work of Dan Brown, but the mysteries here are mostly of the heart. This story of life after loss delivers equal measures of history and hope."—Booklist "The Chapel is a rich and rewarding novel, by turns comic, thoughtful, nostalgic, and exuberant. I only put it down to browse airfares to Italy." —Valerie Martin, bestselling author of Italian Hours and Property "It's moving, funny, and memorable: a tale of the baggage we all travel with, a portrait of grief and regeneration, and a bittersweet love story in which the beloved is a 700–year–old work of art." —Joan Wickersham, bestselling author of The News from Spain and The Suicide Index "There are art lessons, history lessons, and life lessons here, and the amazing and original thing is how all the entanglements sustain the possibility of romance. Downing gives us a witty female narrator with the smarts to make us trust her story. It's bumper cars with biscotti and Prosecco."—Dennis McFarland, bestselling author of Nostalgia and The Music Room "At last, a love story for adults wrapped in a sophisticated mystery about art, religion and the fragility of the human heart."— Elizabeth Benedict, bestselling author of Almost and The Practice of Deceit "Clever, acerbic Liz is both terse and obliquely flirtatious with the many men she meets who tend, surprisingly, to be voluble, kindly and sometimes sexy . . . playful and erudite " —Kirkus Reviews