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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nicholas RinaldiPublisher: Transworld Publishers Ltd Imprint: Black Swan Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 12.70cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 19.80cm Weight: 0.315kg ISBN: 9780552998109ISBN 10: 0552998109 Pages: 464 Publication Date: 03 February 2000 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews'Under the heat and the hammering of bombs, Rinaldi paints the essence of the Second World War in exciting miniature' -- David Hughes * Mail on Sunday * 'Much to enjoy...Rinaldi has tremendous fun evoking the rich cultural pudding that was Malta in 1942, its weird combination of superstition, fatalism and grafted-on anglophilia, of ricotta and stiff upper lip' -- Patrick Gale * Daily Telegraph * 'Funny, romantic, disturbing...A marvellous tapestry of war...Moving and satisfying' * The New York Times * 'A beguiling, romantic story in an illuminating and surprising setting' -- Joseph Heller The influences of Joseph Heller's classic Catch-22 and Louis de Bernieres' recent Corelli's Mandolin are rather too blatantly present in this otherwise well-constructed and quite likable second novel by poet and author Rinaldi (Bridge Fall Down, 1985). The story recounts the awkward coming-of-age of Corporal Rocco Raven, a young Brooklynite assigned to an intelligence unit based on the island of Malta, under German and Italian air attack, in 1942. Rocco is an engaging innocent, a well-meaning Candide (or Yossarian, for that matter) who can't find the Major to whom he's supposed to report, can't understand the complex wheeler-dealer patois of his superior officer, Captain (later Major) Fingerly - and can't resist the ripe erotic allure of Melita Azzard, the forthright Maltese girl who delivers and services the jukeboxes her resourceful cousin Zammit peddles to bars that cater to American and British military men. Rocco's brief encounter with Melita, inevitably destined to end when his unit is reassigned, is charmingly portrayed - and both the wry energy and the bittersweet transience of their union are paralleled by several beguiling comic creations, including cousin Zammit's hopeless infatuation with the reigning Miss Sicily, the combative fury of an indignant villager (Nardu Camillen) who loudly celebrates Malta's (nonexistent) military prowess, and the paradoxical lust for life exhibited by US bomber pilot Tony Zebra, an intuitive genius, with a nose better than radar and an uncanny knack for knocking planes down. Yet beneath the manic comedy here runs a steady undercurrent of destructiveness: the bombs never stop falling, and the end of Rocco's idyll looms unmistakably ahead. If Heller hadn't existed, we might be calling this a pretty terrific novel. Then again, in a universe without Catch-22, it's doubtful that The Jukebox Queen of Malta could even have been written. (Kirkus Reviews) Set in Malta during World War II, this is the story of two young people: New Yorker Rocco Raven, a tyro radioman sending coded messages; and Maltese Melita, who repairs and delivers the jukeboxes devised by her ingenious cousin Zammit from old car and gramaphone parts. In the welter of air-raids, bomb-damage, and the threat of starvation, they fall in love. Rinaldi captures, uncannily, the soul and spirit of Malta itself and its characterful people providing a most convincing book about World War II. (Kirkus UK) 'Under the heat and the hammering of bombs, Rinaldi paints the essence of the Second World War in exciting miniature' -- David Hughes Mail on Sunday 'Much to enjoy...Rinaldi has tremendous fun evoking the rich cultural pudding that was Malta in 1942, its weird combination of superstition, fatalism and grafted-on anglophilia, of ricotta and stiff upper lip' -- Patrick Gale Daily Telegraph 'Funny, romantic, disturbing...A marvellous tapestry of war...Moving and satisfying' The New York Times 'A beguiling, romantic story in an illuminating and surprising setting' -- Joseph Heller Author InformationNicholas Rinaldi teaches at Fairfield University, in Connecticut, where he lives with his wife, Jackie. His work includes two novels, Bridge Fall Down and The Jukebox Queen of Malta, and three collections of poetry- The Resurrection of the Snails, The Luftwaffe in Chaos and We Have Lost Our Fathers. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |