The mother by Grazia Deledda

(6 User reviews)   1471
Deledda, Grazia, 1871-1936 Deledda, Grazia, 1871-1936
English
Hey, I just finished this intense little book called 'The Mother' by Grazia Deledda, and I need to talk about it. Imagine this: a tiny, isolated mountain village in Sardinia, where everyone knows everyone's business. The new priest, Paul, arrives, and his devout, widowed mother comes with him, thrilled he's chosen this holy path. But Paul has a secret. He's fallen desperately in love with Agnes, a woman from the village who is seen as wild and sinful by the community. His mother discovers the affair, and her entire world—her faith, her pride, her reason for living—shatters. The whole book is this unbearable, silent pressure cooker. She can't tell a soul. She has to watch her son, the priest, potentially ruin himself, all while smiling and keeping up appearances. It's a story about the worst kind of love: the possessive, all-consuming love of a mother facing the one thing she can't control. It's short, but it packs a brutal emotional punch. If you like stories about impossible choices, secret guilt, and the clash between sacred duty and human desire, you have to read this.
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Grazia Deledda won the Nobel Prize for literature, and after reading 'The Mother', I completely understand why. She writes about a world that feels both foreign and deeply familiar—a remote Sardinian village where the church bell dictates life and gossip is the real currency.

The Story

The plot is deceptively simple. Paul, a young priest, takes up his first post in the village of Aar. His mother, who has sacrificed everything for his vocation, moves with him. She is pious, proud, and sees her son as almost a saint. But Paul is hiding a passionate love affair with Agnes, a local woman with a 'scandalous' reputation. When his mother accidentally stumbles upon the truth, her life collapses inward. She is trapped. Exposing him would destroy him and disgrace her. Staying silent means watching him potentially commit a mortal sin and break his vows. The story unfolds over just a few tense days, focusing almost entirely on the mother's internal torment as she watches, waits, and prays in agony.

Why You Should Read It

This isn't an action-packed thriller; it's a psychological excavation. Deledda locks you inside the mother's head, and it's a claustrophobic, heartbreaking place to be. You feel the weight of her love, which is also her prison. The setting is a character itself—the harsh, beautiful Sardinian landscape mirrors the stark, unforgiving moral code of the village. What struck me most was how modern the conflict feels. It's about the masks we wear, the secrets families keep, and the terrible gap between who we are expected to be and who we really are. Paul isn't a villain; he's a man torn between two callings. His mother isn't just a symbol of faith; she's a woman whose entire identity is being stripped away.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who love character-driven stories and don't mind a slow, intense burn. If you enjoyed the emotional suffocation of novels like Ethan Frome or the moral dilemmas in Kazuo Ishiguro's work, you'll find a kindred spirit in Deledda. It's also a fantastic, accessible entry point into classic European literature. Just be prepared—it's a quiet novel that leaves a very loud echo in your mind.



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Liam Moore
1 year ago

Beautifully written.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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