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The View from the Tower Paperback – December 17, 2013
- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherExhibit A
- Publication dateDecember 17, 2013
- ISBN-101909223662
- ISBN-13978-1909223660
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Product details
- Publisher : Exhibit A
- Publication date : December 17, 2013
- Language : English
- Print length : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1909223662
- ISBN-13 : 978-1909223660
- Item Weight : 9.2 ounces
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Charles Lambert was born in England in 1953 but has lived in Italy since 1976. His first novel, Little Monsters, a Good Housekeeping selection, was published in 2008, the same year as The Scent of Cinnamon and Other Stories, the title story an O. Henry Prizewinner. Any Human Face, his second novel was described by the Telegraph as 'a slow-burning, beautifully written crime story that brings to life the Rome that tourists don't see - luckily for them.' The View from the Tower, also set in Rome, appeared in 2012, followed in 2014 by With a Zero at its Heart, one of the Guardian's top ten books of that year.
The Children's Home, a dystopian fantasy, took readers by surprise in 2016 and was followed in 2017 by Two Dark Tales and, in 2018, by Prodigal, which explores what we do to one another in the name of love and was shortlisted for the Polari Prize. The Bone Flower, a Gothic ghost story set in Victorian London, appeared in 2022. His latest novel, Birthright, a psychological thriller, was published in April 2023.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2014I received my copy from the publisher through NetGalley
Over two years ago I read “Any Human Face” by Charles Lambert and was very impressed by this, at the time, new to me author. That book was the first one in a planned trilogy about the darker side of Rome. “The View from the Tower” is the second title in that trilogy and impressed me even more than the first one did.
Just like “Any Human Face” this is a literary thriller. Even though Helen’s husband is murdered at the start of the story the emphasis isn’t immediately on why or by whom he was killed. In fact, the first part of this book appears to concentrate on Helen and her feelings of guilt, loss, confusion and denial as she takes a closer look at her husband of 30 years and the relationship she had with him. Her feelings are complicated by the fact that for all of those 30 years Helen has had an affair with her husband’s best friend, Giacomo, the man she was visiting in his hotel room while her husband was being killed a short distance away.
As Helen struggles to understand her husband’s death and the extent to which she and the people she knows may have been responsible for it, she is forced to examine her own past and peel back the years of secrets and lies. It is while Helen takes a closer look at her life, the events that took place in the past and the feelings she has for the two men in her life that the reader and Helen get an understanding of what has happened and why events took the turn they did.
This is an intricate story. While on the surface it deals with politics, revolution, violence, murder and conspiracies this is also, or predominantly, a story about relationships, the secrets we keep from each other, no matter how close we imagine ourselves to be to our partner, and the shock of discovering after 30 or more years together that you really didn’t know the person you were sharing your life with - or they you - as well as you thought you did.
The descriptions of Helen’s struggles while coming to terms with her loss are heartbreakingly real. Those short moments of forgetting that the person who was such an integral part of your life is no longer there and the renewed pain of loss when you remember, are vivid and recognisable. I also liked that there are no heroes and no real villains in this book. Actions taken for all the right reasons may still prove completely wrong under closer scrutiny. This is a brutally honest book. None of the characters are portrayed in a flattering light; all of them have their shortcomings and most of them are well aware of that fact. These characters are as real as the people we meet from day to day in our real lives. As a result it took me some time to take to any of them. By the end of the book though I had come to like most of these characters exactly because they were so brutally realistic.
This is a thriller in which the tension is insidious rather than obvious, an undertone rather than in the readers face. Even when the story appears to be only about Helen’s wildly varying emotions the tension is there, just under the surface. The reader is constantly aware that whatever is going on it won’t be something simple, and while it doesn’t appear that the narrative is steering us in the direction of a solution, that is exactly what is happening. Every conversation and action - both past and present - has significance even when they appear unrelated to the mystery of who committed the murder.
Charles Lambert has produced an intriguing thriller that kept me guessing until the very end; a story that isn’t always easy to read but very rewarding once it all comes together. This is an author who is not afraid to portray people as they are, warts and all, and manages to make his readers care about them even when their actions are questionable. I’m in awe of this author’s writing and eagerly awaiting the third book in this Rome trilogy. I couldn’t have wished for a better start to my reading year.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2014I confess that I only read about half of this on my kindle. I think that it was recommended to me by Amazon in error because the author has the same name as someone whose work I like. I did not like this convoluted novelization of a prime time soap. I can see better plot lines developed with greater depth on network television any night of the week. A thriller really only has one job. This one failed to perform as promised.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2014Lambert is a patient, careful writer. A View from the Tower is another great achievement, a work of emotional and psychological realism. Although billed as a thriller, it is truly a literary study of grief, love, and the inconstant and unpredictable nature of relationships and connections.
Yes, indeed, there is a fascinating political narrative here undergirding the entire story. You’ll find physical danger and mystery. But A View from the Tower does not have the pace of the thriller; don’t buy this book expecting The Da Vinci Code. Expect complex characters and utterly believable reactions to brutal events. Helen, the main character, was married to Federico, a senior political figure in the Italian government. At the very beginning of the novel, he is assassinated while driving in his armored limo to work. And this unfortunately occurs just as Helen is reconnecting (literally) with her former adulterous lover and Federico’s best friend from their politically radical past. Pass a side of guilt, anyone?
The remainder of the novel works bits and pieces forward to reveal exactly why and by whom he was killed, yet what in many novels would be the foreground, here is really the backdrop for exploring how Helen deals with her husband’s murder: her feelings about him and their relationship, and her relationship to her occasional lover Giacomo. She is in some ways on a journey of discovery about herself as well as discovery that…perhaps she didn’t know Federico as well as she thought she did. The threads of who he was, who anyone is, begin to fray and unravel. I believe the greatest attribute of this work that elevates it so highly is the convincing realism. Lambert is a master at creating characters who seem real. He strikes no false note here. He never panders to likeability. These are fully fleshed out, breathing people. Flaws, insecurities, mannerisms, egos, awkwardness, everything is on display.
A View from the Tower also provides a convincing sense of setting. Call Rome another character, I enjoy they way that Lambert effortlessly weaves in subtle details of life in the capital city. You can taste the olive oil.
Truly, emotions are the star of A View from the Tower. Lambert opens a window to reveal how people feel (and act) in tragic circumstances. Highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2014I know the author but my reasons for giving five stars are not connected with this. Like him, I have lived a lifetime in Italy (in my case 40 years) and know the country well by now. Lambert's novel gets inside the soul of modern Italy and in a beautifully written novel shows how in a very small way a non-Italian anti heroine can make a small change in life here. All this is done in a story which first unfolds slowly as he builds up the characters of his often irritating protagonists. By the end of the book, which is a real page-turner, they have acquired real depth and even become attractive - one begins to care for and about them.
The complexities of being Italian and of being a foreigner in Italy, a country where the dividing lines between personal and political, between abstract reasoning and concrete action are more blurred than in the rest of Europe, are revealed in a multi-layered plot which moves from Rome to Turin and back very deftly.
By the end of the book I was sorry to have to put it down, but the cathartic effect of the final scenes made it well worth while and that is why it gets five stars.
Top reviews from other countries
Weston Anita JoyReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 28, 20145.0 out of 5 stars The Shadow of the Tower: all this will one day not be yours.
Initially thought it was an insider job, for Italy-dwellers only, but then realized it was a hothousing of the reader, to lock them into something, not just at plot-level -- I personally don't "do" plot -- they weren't going to want to get out of. In any case, its presentation of the terrorist years in Italy informs, intrigues, and should interest anyone who was alive, in Europe, and in possession of a social awareness then and now. Read disingenuously: characters and situations are almost always slightly skewed, and emotions sometimes come at you from a few feet to the side of where you're expecting them. Watch that Giulia. Climb the tower slowly.
- the plot? Oh that. That's fantastic!
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 16, 20142.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
I thought this would be the ideal novel for me as I know Italy well and lived and worked there in the 1970s. At that time the extreme political elements of the Neo-fascists and Marxist Red Brigades were struggling for supremacy and atrocities such as the bombings in Milan and Brescia and the kidnap and murder of Aldo Moro and others took place. The author has, I understand, lived in Italy for a long time and obviously has a good knowledge of the country.
The novel switches between now and those times and explores the changes in the lives and relationships of several characters. Particularly the impact of acts committed then, on individuals who have moved on in life. The central character is the wife of a politician who is murdered at the start of the story.
Sadly I found the book unsatisfying. The plot was good but the characters remained shallow, so that I didn't really care what happened to them. The identification of the person responsible for the murder seemed to happen in a brief revelation and the novel finished so abruptly that I was left looking for the next chapter. Possibly the very short flashbacks didn't work well because they didn't allow any atmosphere of those times to be created. They seemed just like a device to explain the plot.
I wish I could be more positive about it but I feel like it was an opportunity for a really good novel which just didn't make it.





