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The Stolen Child by Ann Hood

The Stolen Child

A Novel

by Ann Hood

  • Critics' Consensus (5):
  • Readers' Rating (22):
  • Published:
  • May 2024, 304 pages
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There are currently 22 reader reviews for The Stolen Child
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Gail K. (Saratoga Springs, NY)

Poignant and heart warming
From the first page, where I met Enzo, the man who runs The Museum of Tears in Naples in 1935, to the next chapter that introduced Nick, a young American soldier in a trench dug on the property of a farmhouse in France in 1917, to the following chapter set in 1973 that tells of Jenny, a young woman stuck in a dreary life, but who has big dreams, I was hooked. Ann Hood paints a marvelous picture of a lonely, guilt-ridden man and his companion, eager for a change in her life, on their quest to find the resolution to a long-held mystery. I couldn't put it down but deliberately slowed my reading as I approached themore
Beth P. (Chester, VA)

This Book Has it All!
This Book Has it All!

It has been a long time since I sat and read a book for hours, almost finishing it in one sitting, were it not for the late hour. The Stolen Child, by Ann Hood has everything you might want in a book. The author manages to weave in a mystery that keeps you guessing, characters you will feel attached to, and the most incredible scenery that almost jumps off the page. Most of the story takes place in Italy, and I could almost smell the delicious foods that were described so well. The story is about an older man and a huge regret that he has carried with him since he was 18. He finds help inmore
Kathrin C. (Corona, CA)

Literary Pasta with Historical Sauce
I think Ann Hood's latest novel, The Stolen Child, yields a very intriguing, tangled pasta made up of history, Italy, families, personal challenges, love and LIFE. Imagine in the 1970s a mismatched, out-of-the-ordinary trio traveling through France and Italy, trying to find out what happened to an abandoned baby during WW I: Nick Burns, harboring life-long guilt from his involvement then as a young soldier; Jenny, a young college dropout escaping her current go-nowhere life with a strong drive to prove herself; and Charlie Reynolds, travel guide extraordinaire. A delightful read covering multiple stories (somemore
Susan W. (Hamilton, OH)

Secrets. Influence your life
I must confess that when I started this novel, I wasn't impressed, then skimmed through it and decided to finish reading it. By sixty pages in I was completely hooked and could not stop reading. Characters that I began to care about, a story and a mystery that seemed to have no possible solution, yet an ending that was believable and satisfying. I will read this a second time!

A museum for tears seemed like a far-fetched idea for a museum but as the character of Enzo evolved, his collection of tears along with their one line descriptions painted an unusual picture of real people's hopes, dreams, and tragedies.more
Becky T. (Apollo, PA)

A must read!
Thank you to Book Browse and W. W. Norton for this great read!

5.0

Entrust, mystery, unravel…

The Stolen Child has several storylines:

1917- American soldier Nick Burns is in a trench on a French farm. He paints a mural on the trench wall while waiting for the Germans to arrive. Camille, who lives on the farm with her husband, gives Nick her newborn baby and some of her personal paintings, saying, "Save them."

1935-1970s - Enzo and his brother Massimo are craftsmen in Naples, Italy, specializing in Nativities.

1973 - Rhode Island IHOP waitress Jenny loves everything Italy. She answers an ad to accompany a dying man,more
Power Reviewer
Jill

Gorgeously Written Story
THE STOLEN CHILD by Ann Hood

4.5 stars
Thank you to NetGalley and RB Media for the audiobook of this gorgeously written work of secrets long buried in the trenches of World War I, by Ann Hood. This is a historical fiction, mystery and romance read.

Narration by Jefferson Mays was well done.

How a one time chance encounter and a decision made can haunt you for a lifetime; exactly what happens to soldier, Nick Burns in 1917 at the young age of nineteen during World War I. A French artist, Camille Chastain, thrusts her paintings in one bundle and a baby in another bundle into Nick’s hands —- and flees.

The storymore
Judi R. (Jericho, NY)

How past actions haunt the present
Thank you to Book Browse and W.W. Norton for an Advanced Reader's Copy of The Stolen Child by Ann Hood. Much of this novel addresses repercussions of decisions that the characters made in their pasts and how these actions haunted them throughout their lives. An unlikely duo get together to try and resolve the past before it is too late. In addition to a wonderful story that takes the reader from WWI to the 1970s, the author presents a travelogue describing the sights, food and art of France and Italy. Both of these lost characters help each other to heal and eventually find peace and love. I would have likedmore
Diane J. (Grove City, PA)

Grab your backpack and go on a literary Eural Pass journey!
Imagine a typical American collegiate, dreaming of the romance and adventure of travel abroad. Ann Hood will help to take you there with her most recent book, The Stolen Child. The author provides a strong sense of place for Italy and France, most likely from her own extensive travel experience.

Formatted in multiple timelines, Hood balances the perspectives of a young soldier in the Great War with a college coed dropout from 1970s Providence, Rhode Island. Their stories are linked together in an engaging way.

The novel is character rich with personal stories clearly in the foreground and the historical elementsmore
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