Laura Imai Messina is an Italian novelist born and raised in Rome. She earned her PhD in comparative studies from Tokyo University of Foreign Studies and lives in Japan with her husband and two children. The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World, sold in 21 countries and an international bestseller, is her English-language debut.
"The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World has such a subtle
strength to it. The power to transfer such huge emotion from the
page to my heart. It felt like a balm to my soul. . . . For me it
is easily one of my books of the year."--Waterstones (UK)
bookseller
"a must-read...a beautifully written book...Messina writes in a way
that's evocative of Kazuo Ishiguro but in an opposite way: While
Ishiguro leads with comfort and hints at the sadness to come,
Messina offers grief and sadness first but offers the reader a
trail of breadcrumbs toward future happiness."--Kirkus
"a tender tribute to grief and what it teaches us. Healing is not
linear, and the ones we lose never truly leave us...The phone booth
is a magical place that not only connects the living to the dead
but also the living to the living."--BookPage
"an astonishment...a quiet, contemplative, and gripping tale [that]
provides a message of hope and endurance"
--Christian Science Monitor
"A message of hope for anyone lost, frightened, or grieving.
Beautiful."--Clare Mackintosh, New York Times bestselling author of
I Let You Go and After the End
"A story about the dogged survival of hope when all else is lost .
. . Messina shows us that even in the face of a terrible tragedy,
such as an earthquake or a loss of a child, the small things - a
cup of tea, a proffered hand - can offer a way ahead. Its
meditative minimalism makes it a striking haiku of the human
heart."--The Times (London)
"Before I got started, I already loved the phone booth at the edge
of the world. But then I loved everything else. Especially the
beautiful prose, powerful but held back, like grief. And the
characters--emerging blinking from their tragedies, hurt, and
hesitant--but ultimately hopeful. It was a joy to read.
Mesmerizing."--Joanna Glen, author of The Other Half of Augusta
Hope
"Carefully told and with great care, this feels a particularly
resonating story right now."--Stylist
"Spare and poetic, this beautiful book is both a small, quiet love
story and a vast, expansive meditation on grieving and
loss."--Heat
"There is a stillness and quietness to the book that makes each
movement all the more meaningful. The words carry a weight that
makes each sentence feel intentional; there's no fat to trim.
Moving and heart-breaking, Yui's story--and that of the Wind
Phone--is equally uplifting and heart-warming."
--Asian Review of Books
"This beautiful novel tells a story of universal loss and the power
of love. It will remain engraved in my heart and mind forever.
During these difficult times we face, it addresses questions that
we might all have--how to connect with those we have loved and lost
and how to allow ourselves to live and to love again. Beautifully
written, sensitive and evocative, it paints a picture of an inner
and outer world that is infused with both tragedy and hope. It
moved me to tears and made me want to speak my own secret thoughts
in the phone box at the edge of the world. Absolutely breathtaking
and stunning."--Christy Lefteri, bestselling author of The
Beekeeper of Aleppo
"This book is one to read now."--Cosmopolitan (UK)
"This is a beautiful book. And a timely one. It tells a story about
the aftermath of a disaster, long after the disaster. It tells of
memories of the first few weeks after horror struck, but more it
tells about the years after. If we're not directly affected, we
lose sight of the years after that others have to endure. Or
survive."--Bookbag (UK)
"Thoughtful and tender, full of small daily moments and acts of
kindness, Messina's novel is a testament to the power of community
(and a bit of whimsy) in moving forward after loss."--Shelf
Awareness
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