From Publishers Weekly
A 12-year-old Albanian girl is sold into prostitution in Italy; a boy is duped by a man who pretends he is a pigeon; an eight-year-old girl is forced by her grandmother to service an old man. Most of the 12 stories in Italian writer Dacia Maraini's chilling collection Darkness involve the betrayal of children by the adults charged with caring for them. Alicetta, a schizophrenic girl, is given baths late at night by a hospital orderly armed with sedatives; Tano, a tough 11-year-old, denounces his father for rape many times, but no one believes him. In spare, luminous prose, Maraini evokes the wary innocence of abused children and the perversity, confusion or stupidity of their parents and guardians. Linking most of the stories is Insp. Adele Sofia, who sucks on licorice drops as she ponders her cases. This is a moving, gracefully written collection.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
*Starred Review* In a dozen short stories inspired by crime coverage in Italian newspapers, Maraini drives home two crucial points about child rape and murder. The first is that neglectful and corrupt parents deserve a great deal of blame in most child-abuse and abduction cases. The second is that Western nations--and the officials who serve as their instruments of justice--are too often willing to ignore pleas for help from young victims. As terrible as the fates that befall the children in
Darkness--an 11-year-old girl is sold into prostitution; an 11-year-old boy files several police reports in a vain attempt to stop his father from raping him and his siblings--the true horror for the reader comes from comprehending how complicit society is in these acts. It's far easier, it seems, to ignore the possibility that orderlies are repeatedly violating an institutionalized little girl than it is to acknowledge that such evils take place every day. In these stark tales, Maraini illuminates truths about the issue that television ignores in its missing-kid-of-the-week coverage. As Adele Sofia, the police inspector who figures in many of the stories, comes to understand, "Children should always be believed before adults." Powerful fiction evocatively translated from the Italian.
Frank SennettCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved