Reviews
"Reminiscent of The Red Tent , Anita Diamant's book-club favorite..."-- Susannah Meadows, The New York Times, "O'Melveny's writing is smooth and evocative. Gabriella proves a likeable traveling companion, and her first-person narration keeps things moving along....Readers will find much to enjoy in this colorful, picaresque tale."-- David Maine, Popmatters, "Infused with the sensuous places and metaphorical natural world that recur in [O'Melveny's] poetry..."-- Anne Gray Fischer, Ploughshares, "Gorgeously written, and filled with details about science and medicine, this is an unforgettable debut novel."-- Tara Quinn, Cleveland Plain Dealer, "Poet O'Melveny's debut fiction is like a lyrical composite creature-part father/daughter epistolary novel, part aristocratic diary, part adventurer's travelogue, and part compendium of allegorical diseases...Readers will be delighted by O'Melveny's whimsical embellishments."-- Publishers Weekly, "[A] picaresque fiction debut...a provocative window into early medical pronouncements on everything from depression to claustrophobia..."-- Jan Stuart, The Boston Globe, "Intriguing.... Every new chapter brings a new adventure and a new piece of the puzzle."-- Claire Rivero, The Washington Independent Review of Books, "[Gabriella Mondini's] journey is conveyed with earthy and sensual brio [and] clearly well-researched evocations of time and place, and...poetical description....You will love this adventure."-- Elle Magazine, "....[A]n elegant portrait of a resolute woman who practices medicine in 16th-century Venice...The writing is superb, particularly when the author describes..exotic locales and ancient superstitions. The book will especially attract readers who enjoy female centered historical novels whose plots are not driven by romance."-- Lucy Roehrig, Library Journal, Regina O'Melveny's debut novel, THE BOOK OF MADNESS AND CURES, is a marvelous, inventive story of a singular courageous woman on a quest to find her missing father. Set in the Renaissance, it explores the wonders, and dangers, of Europe and Asia Minor and recreates a world--exotic and familiar, sensuous and beguiling--where a defiant woman, practicing the ancient healing arts, is believed to be contrary to the laws of God and Man., [A] picaresque fiction debut...a provocative window into early medical pronouncements on everything from depression to claustrophobia..., "Regina O'Melveny's debut novel, THE BOOK OF MADNESS AND CURES, is a marvelous, inventive story of a singular courageous woman on a quest to find her missing father. Set in the Renaissance, it explores the wonders, and dangers, of Europe and Asia Minor and recreates a world--exotic and familiar, sensuous and beguiling--where a defiant woman, practicing the ancient healing arts, is believed to be contrary to the laws of God and Man."-- Kathleen Kent, author of The Traitor's Wife and The Heretic's Daughter, ....[A]n elegant portrait of a resolute woman who practices medicine in 16th-century Venice...The writing is superb, particularly when the author describes..exotic locales and ancient superstitions. The book will especially attract readers who enjoy female centered historical novels whose plots are not driven by romance., Regina O'Melveny's debut novel, The Book of Madness and Cures , is a marvelous, inventive story of a singular courageous woman on a quest to find her missing father. Set in the Renaissance, it explores the wonders, and dangers, of Europe and Asia Minor and recreates a world--exotic and familiar, sensuous and beguiling--where a defiant woman, practicing the ancient healing arts, is believed to be contrary to the laws of God and Man., Gorgeously written, and filled with details about science and medicine, this is an unforgettable debut novel., Poet O'Melveny's debut fiction is like a lyrical composite creature-part father/daughter epistolary novel, part aristocratic diary, part adventurer's travelogue, and part compendium of allegorical diseases...Readers will be delighted by O'Melveny's whimsical embellishments., Infused with the sensuous places and metaphorical natural world that recur in [O'Melveny's] poetry..., ....[A]n elegant portrait of a resolute woman who practices medicine in 16th-century Venice...The writing is superb, particularly when the author describes..exotic locales and ancient superstitions. The book will especially attract readers who enjoy female centered historical novels whose plots are not driven by romance., [Gabriella Mondini's] journey is conveyed with earthy and sensual brio [and] clearly well-researched evocations of time and place, and...poetical description....You will love this adventure.